Cleveland Centennial Half Dollar |
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This half dollar celebrates the
one-hundredth anniversary of Cleveland, Ohio’s incorporation as a city, as
well as the Great Lakes Exposition staged during 1936-37 in honor of
Cleveland’s centennial. In that
respect, it’s a perfectly legitimate commemorative coin issue; some may
argue, however, that the event was not really worthy of recognition on a
United States coin. What really raised eyebrows at
the time, however, was the involvement of one Thomas G. Melish of Cincinnati.
A tireless promoter of new commemorative coins, it was Melish who
previously contrived to have the Cincinnati half dollar coined, an issue which
had no legitimate foundation whatsoever.
Celebrating a fictitious anniversary which commemorated nothing of
substance, and it featured a portrait of composer Stephen Foster, whose
connection with the city of Cincinnati had been peripheral, at best.
Branded by many observers as simply a profit-making racket for Melish,
it was this same individual who now served as treasurer for the Cleveland
Centennial Commemorative Coin Association, an organization of which he may
have been the sole member. “It
seems strange that Mr. Melish, living in Cincinnati, should be the distributor
of the Cleveland issue” remarked Numismatic Scrapbook Magazine Editor Lee F.
Hewitt in the May 1936 issue. The Cleveland half dollar
celebrates that city’s centennial of incorporation, although it was actually
founded in 1796. Settled on land
along the southern shore of Lake Erie at the mouth of the Cuyahoga River,
Cleveland was a part of the so-called “Western Reserve.”
This title referred to land in northeast Ohio that was still claimed by
the state of Connecticut! The old
colonial charters had given each colony the lands “to the west,” without
any specific terminus, and Connecticut was the last of the states to surrender
its claims in 1800. By then the
area in and around what is now Cleveland had been settled by many Connecticut
farmers whose lands were burned by the British during the War of Independence.
This land was given to them by the state of Connecticut in compensation
for their sacrifice. That portion of the Western
Reserve which remained was purchased by the Connecticut Land Company in 1795.
Among its surveyors was one Moses Cleaveland, who laid out the
settlement which bears his name (the first ‘a’ was dropped by the city
around 1830). Ironically, the
group of 50 immigrants who followed Cleveland to Ohio was not from Connecticut
but from Schenectady, New York. Born in Canterbury, Connecticut
in 1754, Cleaveland participated in the War of Independence and was eventually
named a brigadier general in the United States Army. In addition to his adventures as a surveyor, he studied
law at Yale and pursued this field as a career.
He later served in the Connecticut state legislature, dying in 1806 at
the age of just 52. The Cleveland Centennial and
Great Lakes Exposition was held June 27 to October 4, 1936, reopening for a
second season in 1937. Honoring
the city of Cleveland and the industrial achievements of the Great Lakes
region, it apparently had no official connection with the Cleveland/Great
Lakes half dollar, although specimens of the coin were sold there. The act which authorized the
coining of not less than 25,000 nor more than 50,000 Cleveland halves was
modificd several times before its passage on May 5, 1936.
Introduced several weeks earlier at the prompting of Thomas G. Melish,
it originally called for the striking of multiple designs honoring Cleveland
and the Great Lakes Exposition. When
this was not achieved, Melish sought to have part of the issue coined in 1937
with that additional date as an inducement for collectors to buy both
varieties. Congress, wary of such tactics, refused to comply, and the
final bill called for a single design coined at a single mint. Selected to prepare models for
this coin was Brenda Putnam, whose sketches were submitted to the Federal
Commission of Fine Arts on May 1, 1936 by Mint Director Nellie Tayloe Ross.
These sketches are very similar to the coin as made.
The few revisions reflect the advice of the commission’s sculptor
member, Lee Lawrie, who suggested that stars representing the Great Lakes
cities be substituted in place of actual city skylines.
Aside from this comment, Lawrie and the commission as a whole were
pleased with Putnam’s design, and they gave their approval on June 2, 1936.
In a letter to Lawrie, commission President Charles Moore couldn’t
resist poking some fun at the whole commemorative mania, which was then at its
peak: “I am convinced that the
whole movement is a coin-collector’s racket that is going on all over the
country . . .” The obverse of the Cleveland half
features a portrait bust of Moses Cleaveland facing left.
Surrounding this are his name and the motto LIBERTY, the two inscriptions
arranged in arc form and separated by three stars.
Arranged in peripheral arcs are UNITED STATES OF AMERICA above and HALF
DOLLAR below, these separated by more ornamental dots.
The sculptor’s initials BP are found below the bust.
On the reverse of the Cleveland half is an aerial view of the five
Great Lakes. Nine stars
representing the major lakeport cities appear in their respective positions.
A compass is placed above them, with its axis pointing toward the
largest star, Cleveland. The
statutory mottoes IN GOD WE TRUST and E PLURIBUS UNUM appear in the field.
Around the periphery are GREAT LAKES EXPOSITION and CLEVELAND
CENTENNIAL, separated by the tiny dates 1836 and 1936. The first 25,000 Cleveland half
dollars were minted in July of 1936, with an additional 15 pieces reserved for
the Assay Commission. Offered on
the exposition grounds at $1.50 per coin or sold through the mail at $1.65
postpaid, these halves proved popular enough to justify coining the balance of
the pieces authorized. This
request for additional pieces came in February 1937, yet the authorizing bill
precluded changing the coins’ date; both strikings are identical.
The 25,015 coined in 1937 included another 15 piece reserved for assay
and later destroyed, leaving a net mintage of 50,000 for this type. Although Melish boasted of great
sales and warned collectors to hurry with their orders lest they be
disappointed, many coins remained unsold at the end of the centennial
celebrations. These were purchased in quantity by dealers at prices just
slightly above face value. No
large hoards survive today, but the re-emergence of an occasional roll is not
unknown. This coin is plentiful
in mint state, with most coins grading MS-60 through MS-64. Gem examples graded MS-65 and MS-66 are not especially rare,
but higher-grade specimens are very elusive.
Cleveland halves were sold to the general public, as well as
collectors, and many are found with signs of abuse.
These will grade EF-40 through AU-58 and may have been cleaned or
otherwise mishandled. Points to
check for wear include Cleaveland’s cheekbone and the hair behind his ear,
as well as the top of the compass. The first 201 coins struck were
placed in numbered and notarized holders, signed by Melish and certifying
their special status. These
typically are better struck and have fewer contact marks than those that
received no special handling. In
1941, 100 ordinary Cleveland halves were counterstamped on both sides by the
Western Reserve Numismatic Club to mark its 20th anniversary.
30 years later, the club again counterstamped Cleveland halves in honor
of its golden anniversary. This
time, however, no more than 15 pieces were made.
Although not an official Mint product, these counterstamped halves are
eagerly sought by commemorative collectors. SPECIFICATIONS: Diameter: 30.6 millimeters Weight: 12.5 grams Composition: .900 silver, .100
copper Edge: Reeded Net Weight: .36169 ounce pure
silver |



