Grant Centennial Half Dollar |
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Fate, they say, is fickle. Anyone
who doubts this should study the career of Ulysses S. Grant, who rose from
utter obscurity to win a prominent place in U.S. history—and also on U.S.
coinage. Two U.S. coins, a gold dollar and a silver half dollar, were issued
in 1922 to mark the centennial of his birth. Nothing in his early years,
however, indicated that Grant might be headed for a rendezvous with fame. Even
“U.S. Grant”—the shorthand form of his name that later seemed so
apt—came about more by accident than design. His given name was actually
Hiram Ulysses Grant, and his background and upbringing were unremarkable. Born
in 1822 near Cincinnati, Ohio, he developed an aversion to his father’s
tannery business and instead performed chores on the family farm, attaining
great skill at handling horses. In 1839, his father secured an appointment for
him to the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, New York. Grant decided to reverse his
given name upon entering West Point, registering as Ulysses Hiram Grant.
However, this was entered by mistake as Ulysses S. Grant, and eventually he
chose to accept that version. He finished only 21st in a class of 39, but did
distinguish himself in horsemanship and mathematics. For the next 11 years, he
pursued his career in the Army with mixed success, winning two citations for
gallantry in battle during the Mexican War. Tiring of postwar tedium and
loneliness, he resigned from the Army in 1854. His civilian endeavors proved
even less successful: Over the next half-decade he failed at both farming and
real estate. He then went to work in a leather-goods business run by his
brothers, and that might have been his last stop on a road leading nowhere.
But the year was 1860, and events would soon alter that path profoundly. With the outbreak of the Civil
War, Grant offered his services to the Union and was appointed a brigadier
general with command of the District of Southeast Missouri. He justified this
confidence, scoring the first major Union victory of the war when his troops
captured Fort Donelson, Tennessee, on February 16, 1862. He demanded and
received “unconditional surrender,” giving new meaning in many admirers’
minds to the “U.S.” in his name. Another triumph followed seven weeks
later at Shiloh, but heavy Union casualties led some to question Grant’s
tactics in that encounter. He lifted this cloud of doubt by orchestrating the
capture of Vicksburg, the last big Confederate stronghold on the Mississippi
River. In March 1864, President
Lincoln promoted Grant to lieutenant general and gave him command of all the
Union armies. He handled this assignment skillfully, pressing the Union’s
numerical advantage to wear down the forces of General Robert E. Lee, his
Confederate counterpart. He accepted Lee’s surrender (unconditional, of
course) at Appomattox Court House, Virginia, on April 9, 1865. Six days later, Lincoln lay dead,
and the presidency passed to Andrew Johnson, a Democrat who feuded incessantly
with the Republicans running Congress. Grant’s relations with Congress, by
contrast, were cordial: In 1866,
that body named him general of the armies of the United States.
Soon, the Republicans saw him as a potential asset politically, and in
1868 they made him their candidate for president. He defeated the Democrats’
nominee and entered the White House on March 4, 1869, at the age of 46. Grant
himself was honest, hard-working and well-meaning, but the same couldn’t
always be said for those around him: His
eight years as president were tainted by scandals and corruption, and he wrote
his own political epitaph near the end of his second term when he told
Congress: “Failures have been errors of judgment, not of intent.” Fate frowned on Grant in
retirement: He sank his capital into an investment firm in which his son was a
partner, and in 1884 the firm collapsed, victim of a swindle by another
partner. That same year, he began writing his memoirs, and these did much to
restore both his finances and his reputation. Just two months after completing
them, he died on July 23, 1885, at age 63. In 1921, a group called the
Ulysses S. Grant Centenary Memorial Association was incorporated, ostensibly
to coordinate special observances and monuments in Grant’s boyhood stomping
grounds in Ohio. These were to include the erection of “community
buildings” in Georgetown and Bethel, Ohio, two towns where he had lived at
various times, plus the laying of a five-mile highway from Point Pleasant to
New Richmond, Ohio. To finance these ventures, the association sought
congressional approval for up to 200,000 examples of a gold dollar. The bill
was amended to call for just 10,000 gold dollars but also up to 250,000 half
dollars. In this form, it won passage on February 2, 1922. The preparation of designs was
entrusted to Laura Gardin Fraser, wife of James Earle Fraser, the artist who
had fashioned the Buffalo nickel. Mrs. Fraser was an accomplished medallist in
her own right, having won acclaim already for her work on the Alabama
Centennial half dollar of 1921. Her design was used on both the gold and
silver Grant coins. The obverse features a right-facing portrait of the
general, with UNITED STATES OF AMERICA around the upper rim, HALF DOLLAR at
the bottom, ULYSSES S. GRANT to the left and right of the portrait and the
double dates 1822-1922 below it. The reverse shows the fenced-in clapboard
house where Grant lived as a boy, shaded by a canopy of trees.
IN GOD WE TRUST appears above and E PLURIBUS UNUM is broken into four
lines to the left. The designer's initial G (for her maiden name, Gardin)
appears below Grant’s bust, between the double dates. In 1921, the sponsors of the
Missouri and Alabama half dollars increased their sales and profits by placing
special markings on small numbers of those coins and promoting these as scarce
and desirable “varieties.” The
Grant Association decided to follow suit, arranging for the placement of an
incused star on half the 10,000 gold dollars.
Apparently by mistake, workmen at the Philadelphia Mint also produced
5,000 half dollars with the star
above GRANT on the obverse. The
half dollars went on sale in April 1922 for $1 each, with no extra premium
being charged for the starred variety. By
year’s end, when the sale period closed, the distributor was asking just 75
cents apiece for the plain kind, if ordered in lots of 10 or more, but half
dollars with the star had risen in price to $1.50.
Sales were respectable, but fell far short of a sellout, even though
actual production was barely 100,000—less than half the 250,000 authorized.
The Mint struck 5,000 Grant half dollars with the star (plus 6 for
assay) and melted 750, for a bottom line of 4,250.
It produced 95,055 pieces without the star (the odd 55 for assay) and
melted 27,650 of these, for a net mintage of 67,350. Many collectors complained about
the extra variety, arguing that the star had no significance except as a
marketing device. Nonetheless, it came to be accepted (and desired) as a
scarce and legitimate collectible. Indeed, it has long since established
itself as one of the major keys among U.S. commemorative half dollars. Like
other pre-Depression commemoratives, many Grant half dollars ended up being
spent when money got tight. Partly for that reason, they’re scarce in
pristine mint condition. Very few have been certified in grades above Mint
State-66, though they’re relatively available in levels up to MS-65. At
least four matte or sandblast proofs of the starred variety are known to
exist, while four similar proofs without the star are reported but
unconfirmed. The Grant halves are notoriously difficult to grade, partly
because raised die lines on the obverse look at first glance like hairlines or
scratches. Points to check for wear include Grant’s cheek and the hair above
his ear. The reverse’s dense design tends to mask imperfections and wear,
but light friction often can be detected in the treetops. Die-struck and
added-star counterfeits are known to exist. SPECIFICATIONS: Diameter: 30.6 millimeters Weight: 12.5 grams Composition: .900 silver, .100
copper Edge: Reeded Net Weight: .36169 ounce pure
silver |


