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Franklin Half Dollars
1948-1963
In 1948, World War II had given way to an uneasy
peace—a “Cold War,” as presidential adviser Bernard Baruch so aptly named the
new climate of international tension. The year also witnessed the death of baseball
legend Babe Ruth, the birth of the State of Israel and, with his presidential
election upset of Thomas E. Dewey, a new lease on life in the White House for
Harry S Truman.
In 1948, an important change took place in United States
coinage as well, when the Franklin half dollar made its debut. Its introduction
completed the conversion of U.S. coin designs from
allegorical figures to portraits of famous Americans. It also rang down
the curtain on an era that many regard as the golden age of U. S. coinage
art. The Walking Liberty half dollar, last struck in 1947, was the final
precious-metal coin remaining in production from the early 20th-century
period that spawned the “Mercury” dime, Standing Liberty quarter and Saint-Gaudens
double eagle.
Mint Director Nellie Tayloe Ross had contemplated a
coin honoring Benjamin Franklin ever since seeing a U.S. Mint medal prepared in
Franklin’s honor in 1933 by John R. Sinnock, the Mint’s chief
sculptor-engraver. Evidence suggests that Ross might have made the change in
the early 1940s, when the half dollar’s design, used for the statutory minimum
of 25 years, became eligible for replacement. Although escalating production
demands occasioned by World War II postponed Ross’ plans, she showed her
enthusiasm for the project by directing Sinnock to design a Franklin coin on a
contingency basis.
It would be hard to fault Director Ross for her choice
of Ben Franklin as a U.S. coinage subject. Of all the Founding Fathers,
Franklin very likely enjoyed the greatest stature among his contemporaries,
not only in this country but also abroad. He was justly renowned as a
printer, publisher, author, inventor, scientist and diplomat, and he played
a pivotal role in helping the colonies gain their independence by securing
vital aid from France.
In a speech at the unveiling of the Franklin half
dollar, Ross recalled that people had urged her to place Franklin’s portrait on
the cent because he was identified so closely with the maxim “A penny saved is
twopence clear” (often misquoted as “A penny saved is a penny earned”). Ross
explained her choice of the half dollar: “You will agree, I believe, that the
fifty-cent piece, being larger and of silver, lends itself much better to the
production of an impressive effect,” she declared.
Sinnock’s portrait of Franklin, modeled after a bust
by 18th-century sculptor Jean-Antoine Houdon, is bold and clean, contrasting
sharply with the subtle, detailed depiction of Miss Liberty on the Walking
Liberty coin it replaced. LIBERTY is inscribed above the right-facing portrait,
IN GOD WE TRUST below and the date to Franklin’s right. Tucked below Franklin’s
shoulder are Sinnock’s initials, JRS.
The Liberty Bell on the reverse made sense as a
complement to Franklin, since both have become closely identified not only with
the nation’s birth but also with the city of Philadelphia. Three inscriptions
are arranged around the bell in the same sans serif style used on the obverse:
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA is above, HALF DOLLAR below and E PLURIBUS UNUM, in
much smaller letters, to the left. To the right of the bell is a puny-looking
eagle. This had been required by law on the half dollar since 1792 and was
reaffirmed by the Coinage Act of 1873, which mandated the placement of an eagle
on every U.S. silver coin larger than the dime. The eagle was added by Gilroy
Roberts, who completed work on the coin following Sinnock’s death in 1947.
Understandably, the federal Commission of Fine Arts
(an advisory body) took issue with the eagle’s size. Oddly enough, they also
disapproved of displaying the crack in the Liberty Bell, arguing that “to show
this might lead to puns and to statements derogatory to United States coinage.”
Although the Commission recommended a design competition, the Treasury
Department approved Sinnock’s models without change.
Years later,
Sinnock was accused of modeling his version of the Liberty Bell, without
proper credit, on a sketch by artist John Frederick Lewis. The pilfering first
occurred in 1926, when Sinnock apparently used the sketch in fashioning his
design for the commemorative half dollar marking the sesquicentennial of U.S.
independence. His Franklin half dollar reverse design was patterned, in turn,
on that earlier work. Numismatic reference books now credit Lewis belatedly for
his role.
Although Franklin half dollar mintages were modest
by modern-day standards, the series contains no issues that are particularly
rare. The production low point came in 1953, when the Philadelphia Mint struck
just under 2.8 million examples; the peak occurred in 1963, when the Denver
Mint made just over 67 million. Franklin halves also were minted in San
Francisco. On branch-mint issues, the D or S mintmark appears above the bell on
the reverse. Total mintage for the series, including proofs, was almost 498 million
coins.
Because they are so plentiful, in circulated
condition most Franklin halves bring little or no premium above their bullion
value. A number of dates are elusive, however, in the higher mint-state grades,
especially with fully defined “bell lines” near the Liberty Bell’s bottom.
Although the relatively low mintage 1949-D and 1950-D issues are considered
“key” dates in the series, some coins with higher mintages, while common in
lower grades, also command impressive premiums in Mint State-65 and above.
These coins routinely came with weak strikes, and the scarcity of “gems” is
compounded by the fact that few were carefully saved. Dates in this category
include 1960-D, 1961-P and D and 1962-P and D. Proofs were issued every year
from 1950 through 1963 as part of annual proof sets: over 15.8 million were
made. Small numbers of proofs were struck with cameo contrast, an attractive
frosted surface on the devices contrasted with a polished mirror-like
appearance in the fields. These cameo coins can bring substantial premiums over
the prices of ordinary proofs without such contrast.
A full set of Franklin halves consists of 35
different business strikes and 14 different proofs. Because it is so compact
and easily affordable in less-than-pristine grades, the series is widely
collected by date and mint. Those with deeper pockets who love a challenge seek
to assemble date-and-mint sets in MS-65 and above or collections of high-grade
proof Franklins with deep cameo contrast. Points on the design to first show
wear are Franklin’s cheek, shoulder and hair behind the ear and the lettering
and lines on the Liberty Bell.
Franklin half dollars were made for just 16 years.
The series was cut short at the end of 1963, when John F. Kennedy’s shocking
assassination led to the creation of a new half dollar memorializing the
martyred president.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: 30.6 millimeters
Weight: 12.50 grams
composition: .900 silver, .100 copper
Edge: Reeded
Net weight: .36169 ounce pure silver
BIBLOGRAPHY:
Breen, Walter, Walter Breen’s Complete Encyclopedia
of U.S. and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Press/Doubleday, New York, 1988.
Ehrmantraut, Jack, Jr., An Analysis of Gem Franklin
Half Dollars, Five Seasons Publishers, Hiawatha, IA, 1983.
Taxay, Don, The U.S. Mint and Coinage, Arco
Publishing Co., New York, 1966.
Tomaska, Rick, The Complete Guide to Franklin Half
Dollars, DLRC Press, Virginia Beach, VA, 1997.
Vermeule, Cornelius, Numismatic Art in America, The
Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1971.
Yeoman, R.S., A Guide Book of United States Coins,
47th Edition, Western Publishing Co., Racine, WI, 1993.
Coin Stories and Photo's are courtesy Numismatic Guarantee Corp. (NGC) and are used with permission.
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