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Peace Silver Dollars 1921-1935 Coin

The "war to end all wars" destroy far abrupt of that good aspiration. What chronicle now terms World War I, which ravished Europe from 1914 to 1918, did stir worldwide yearning, however, for harmony. One directly product of that zealous dream was the League of Nations. Trice, fewer ambitious but regularly sincere, was the Peace dough. America shunned the League, but favorably embraced the coin.

Following the war, there was widespread sentiment for issuance of a coin that would celebrate and commemorate the restoration of peace. The American Numismatic Association played a key function in fostering this offer. At the same time, the U. S. Mint found itself facing the ought to fright producing millions of silver dollars. That poverty grew out of the Pittman Act, a law enacted in 1918 at the urging of-and plainly benefiting-silver-mining happiness. Under this calculate, the government was empowered to melt as many as 350 million silver dollars, move the silver into gold and then moreover advertise the metal or use it to products subsidiary silver penny. It also was essential to beat replacement dollars for all that were melted.

Aside from serving silver producers, the law also aided Great Britain, a wartime ally at the time. During economic living 1918 and 1919, the U. S. Government melted a whole of more than 270 million silver dollars, and most of these-259,121,554-finished up being sold in bullion form to the British, who desired the silver to covenant with an economic calamity in India. During that same interlude, the United States melted 11,111,168 silver dollars to attain new raw relevant for subsidiary coins of its own.

The coins that were melted under the language of the Pittman Act represented virtually half the entire production of stock silver dollars (as distinguished from Trade dollars) made by the U. S. Mint up to that court. Even so, the pasting was no particular blow to the country's export. Silver dollars were since only partial use, and lasting inventories were more than sufficient to function commercial wishes. Demand for the coins was so token, in verity, that nothing had been shaped for more than a dozen time-since 1904.

Against this scene, the Mint had no logic to smack new silver dollars as replacements for the ones that had been melted-but the Pittman Act necessary it to do so. Accordingly, in 1921, after the price of silver had fallen from postwar highs, it ongoing cranking out the long-perched Morgan silver dollars once again. It did so, in truth, in profile figures: During that sole year, the various mints fashioned a whole of more than 86 million examples-simply the peak one-year character in the sequence.

By interesting coincidence, Morgan money production resumed on the very same day-May 9, 1921-that legislation was introduced in Congress work for the issuance of a new silver money marking the postwar peace. As described by its sponsors in a general resolution, the new coin would generate "an appropriate strategy commemorative of the termination of the war between the Imperial German Government and the Government of the people of the United States."

Congress adjourned lacking taking action on the compute. It twisted out, however, that congressional authorization wasn't genuinely needed, since the Morgan buck-having been shaped for more than the official least of 25 days-was topic to replacement without detailed legislative penalize.

To find designs for the coin, the national Commission of Fine Arts agreed a competition involving a small group of the people's finest medalists. The nine invitees included such imminent artists as Victor D. Brenner, Adolph A. Weinman and Hermon A. MacNeil, all whom had intended earlier U. S. Coins. Nevertheless the winner bowed out to be an infantile Italian immigrant named Anthony de Francisci, whose keenly chiseled portrait of Liberty was modeled after his infantile wife Teresa. The back of the coin shows an eagle in lounge atop a cliff, peering regarding the sun through a string of heat, with the word PEACE superimposed on the swing. No other U. S. Coin shaped for circulation has ever borne that motto.

Production of 1921 Peace dollars didn't get under way pending the decisive week of December, and just over a million examples were fashioned. It rapidly became obvious that the coin's relief was too high, making it hard to arrange and causing undue die fissure. The Mint corrected the crisis in 1922 by tumbling the relief-but in the process, it fairly lowered the coin's aesthetic request, as well.

By 1928, the Mint had produced enough Peace dollars to gratify the Pittman Act's requirements. It so halted production. The lid on silver dollars was clamped down even tighter with the arrival of the Depression the next year. The target returned for a two-year curtain call in 1934, mostly because more cartwheels were needed as grant for silver certificates. The 1934-S proved to be one of the key coins in the sequence, along with the 1921 and the 1928. The mintmark is below the word ONE on the change. A handful of matte proofs exist, but only for 1921 and 1922.

Silver dollars-of both designs-were basically unseen by collectors pending the early 1960s, when silver certificate redemptions and the exposure surrounding the Treasury's sales of $1,000 bags of dollars to all comers shaped new relevance in the large silver coins. Ironically, Peace dollars had been swiftly offered at banks for decades, and following Treasury Department policy, were paid out before Morgan dollars were disbursed. Nevertheless few collectors were interested in completing sets of these relatively dear coins, judgment it more handy to assemble collections of the lesser denominations: A silver dollar represented a considerable sum in the 1930s and '40s-enough to buy five dozen eggs or ten boxes of Wheaties. It wasn't until the very early 1960s, when the Treasury had almost emptied its vaults of Peace dollars, that the more required after Morgans started to pour forwards, fueling collector enthusiasm for both sequence in the process.

The entire run of Peace dollars consists of just 24 coins, none of them great rarities. Thus, many collectors strive for finished year-and-mint sets. Pristine, high-grade pieces are elusive, however; weak strikes were common, and the broad, open plan made the coins vulnerable to dress and dent. Points to restrain for clothing are Liberty's face, neckline and the hair over her ear and above her temple. On the reorder, scuff will first show on the eagle's wing, leg and skull.

The Peace dollar's early demise was ominously symbolic. Four years later, in 1939, World War II erupted in Europe. The plan came very close to reappear once more in 1964, when Congress authorized production of 45 million new silver dollars, apparently in a strength to fulfil the wants of Nevada gambling casinos. With the slighter silver coins rapidly disappearing from circulation, this was viewed as a gift to exclusive good. After the Denver Mint produced 316,076 Peace dollars (square 1964) in May of 1965, order rescinded the authorization of President Johnson. Although all pieces were to be recalled and melted, rumors persist of several coins extant.

SPECIFICATIONS:

Diameter: 38.1 millimeters Weight: 26.73 grams Composition: .900 silver.100 copper Edge: Reeded Net Weight: .77344 little genuine silver

BIBLIOGRAPHY: Bowers, Q. David, Silver Dollars & Trade Dollars of the United States, A Complete Encyclopedia, Bowers and Merena, Wolfeboro, NH, 1993. Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S. and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Press/Doubleday, New York, 1988. Miller, Wayne, The Morgan and Peace Dollar Textbook, Adam Smith Publishing Co., Metairie, LA, 1982. Taxay, Don, The U.S. Mint and Coinage, Arco Publishing Co. Inc., New York, 1966. Yeoman, R.S., A Guide Book of United States Coins, 47th Edition, Western Publishing Co., Racine, WI, 1993.

Coin Information Provided Courtesy NGC.

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