
$2½
Indian Head
1908-1929
Mintage: 7.3 million
Designer:
Bela Lyon Pratt
At
the turn of the century, President Theodore Roosevelt thought the
existing US coins were ugly and wanted American coins to be as beautiful
as the coins of ancient Greece.
In late 1905 he asked renowned American sculptor Augustus St. Gaudens
to redesign the $10 eagle and $20 double eagle.
These coins were introduced in 1907, shortly after St. Gaudens’
death. Roosevelt’s
friend, Dr. William S. Bigelow, suggested making coins with
devices sunk below the fields, somewhat like some ancient Egyptian
coins, and convinced sculptor Bela Lyon Pratt to submit models for
the $2½ quarter eagle and $5 half eagle.
Pratt’s designs were forwarded to Mint Engraver Charles E.
Barber, who spent several months delaying the coin’s progress and
modifying the designs.
The
first quarter eagles left the Mint in late 1908 and were immediately
attacked by critics who complained that the coin’s reverse relief
would attract dirt. Despite
the complaints, the coin’s design remained unchanged throughout
its short life. There
was apparently little demand for smaller-denomination gold coins
throughout the 1920s and no quarter eagles were made after 1929.
Types:
This coin was unchanged throughout its life.
Mints:
Minted in Philadelphia (1908-1915, 1926-1929) and Denver (1911,
1914 and 1925). The
‘D’ mintmark is located on the reverse, just to the left of the
arrow point. It is
raised above the surface of the coin and may be faint.
Specifications:
Size: 18 millimeters; Alloy: 90% gold, 10% copper; Weight: 4.18
grams (3.762 grams or 0.121 troy oz. of pure gold).
| Date |
Mintage |
Proofs |
|
Date |
Mintage |
Proofs |
| 1908 |
565,057 |
236 |
1914D |
448,000 |
|
| 1909 |
441,899 |
139 |
1915 |
606,100 |
100 |
| 1910 |
492,682 |
682 |
1925D |
578,000 |
|
| 1911 |
704,191 |
191 |
1926 |
446,000 |
|
| 1911D |
55,680 |
|
1927 |
388,000 |
|
| 1912 |
616,197 |
197 |
1928 |
416,000 |
|
| 1913 |
722,165 |
165 |
1929 |
532,000 |
|
| 1914 |
240,117 |
117 |
|
U.S.
Gold / Gold Content
|