United States Mint to Recreate a
Masterpiece
(Washinton,
March 13th) -United States Mint Director Ed Moy announced
at a meeting today of the Citizens Coinage Advisory
Committee that the agency plans to recreate what many
have called the nation's most beautiful coin ever minted-Augustus
Saint-Gaudens' original ultra-high relief Liberty $20
Gold Piece. The design will be featured on a collectible
24-karat coin intended for sale to the public in 2009.
In preparing to mint this coin, the United States Mint
will test the development of the second variation of
Saint-Gaudens' design, the 27-millimeter, ultra-high
relief coin with Roman numerals.
"We want to spur the highest level of artistic excellence
in American coin design," said Director Moy. "Recreating
thousands of Augustus Saint-Gaudens' ultra-high relief
Double Eagles will be a defining moment in American
coinage."
President Theodore Roosevelt selected Augustus Saint-Gaudens
to improve the designs on the nation's coinage, and
the sculptor's first task was redesigning gold coins.
Maintaining the full artistic integrity of the Saint-Gaudens
design was an arduous undertaking in 1907. The United
States Mint's first attempt-a 34-millimeter ultra-high
relief coin with Roman numerals-required the coins to
be ‘squeezed' into a press and annealed numerous times.
The coining process was impractical for mass production,
and approximately 19 coins of this variety are known
to exist. These coins are now mostly in private ownership.
The United States Mint's second attempt to produce
Saint-Gaudens' design-a 27 millimeter, ultra-high relief
coin with Roman numerals-was in fact two $10 Gold Eagle
planchets melded together. The resulting coins were
twice as thick. The United States Mint had no authority
to strike coins of this specification in 1907, so it
melted all but two or perhaps three of these coins.
The United States Mint's third attempt-a high-relief,
34-millimeter coin with Roman numerals-produced a coin
with reduced relief that required less metal flow to
fill the design and was more practical for mass production.
Approximately 12,000 coins were made for collection.
Later, in 1907, an additional 361,000 coins with Arabic
numerals and a lower relief were produced for circulation.
None of the 1907 variants bore the inscription, "In
God We Trust." The inscription, added in 1908, appears
on the coin's reverse directly above the sun. Production
of the Saint-Gaudens $20 Gold Double Eagle continued
until 1932. Production of the 1933 $20 Gold Double Eagle
ceased, and only one was ever lawfully issued - some
70 years later. The new coin will have the inscription
"In God We Trust" in the same position as 1908, when
the inscription first appeared with this design.
A variation of the Saint-Gaudens Double Eagle has been
in production for the American Eagle Gold Coin product
line since 1986.
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