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fwo_356786 - UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 1 Dollar Morgan 1886 Philadelphie

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 1 Dollar Morgan 1886 Philadelphie MS
Not available.
Item sold on our e-shop (2015)
Price : 90.00 €
Type : 1 Dollar Morgan
Date: 1886
Mint name / Town : Philadelphie
Quantity minted : 19963886
Metal : silver
Millesimal fineness : 900 ‰
Diameter : 38,10 mm
Orientation dies : 6 h.
Weight : 26,78 g.
Edge : cannelée
Coments on the condition:
La monnaie présente un petit coup sur le listel à 7 heures à l’avers. La monnaie conserve son brillant et présente une très agréable patine
Catalogue references :

Obverse


Obverse legend : E . PLURIBUS . UNUM // 1886.
Obverse description : Tête à gauche de femme symbolisant la Liberté.

Reverse


Reverse legend : UNITED - STATES OF - AMERICA // * ONE DOLLAR *.
Reverse description : Aigle aux ailles déployées tenant une branche d’olivier et deux flèches ; couronne de laurier et motto “In God we trust”.

Commentary


En 1873, le « Fourth Coinage act » met fin au bimétallisme et les monnaies en argent sont démonétisées. Cependant dès 1876, de nombreux projets de lois sont proposés afin de réintroduire des dollars en argent. En 1878, Rutherford B. Hayes tente en vain de faire véto au «Bland-Allison Act » au Congrès. Dans cette optique, dès 1876, Henry Linderman, directeur de l'US Mint demande alors à C.W. Fremantle, deputy master de la Royal Mint de Londres, de lui trouver un graveur de coin de premier rang. Ce sera Georges T. Morgan (1845-1925) qui devient assistant graveur auprès du graveur en chef William Barber. Dès 1877, Morgan travaille sur des essais monétaires et prépare son projet de dollar argent. Ainsi en 1878, seulement une semaine après le passage de la loi, l'atelier de Philadelphie frappe des dollars dits « Morgan ». Georges T. Morgan Morgan succèdera à Charles E. Barber (fils de William Barber) en 1917.
In 1873, the Fourth Coinage Act ended bimetallism, and silver coins were demonetized. However, as early as 1876, numerous bills were proposed to reintroduce silver dollars. In 1878, Rutherford B. Hayes unsuccessfully attempted to veto the Bland-Allison Act in Congress. With this in mind, Henry Linderman, director of the U.S. Mint, asked C.W. Fremantle, deputy master of the Royal Mint in London, to find him a top-tier coin engraver. This turned out to be George T. Morgan (1845–1925), who became assistant engraver to chief engraver William Barber. Starting in 1877, Morgan worked on coin trials and prepared his design for a silver dollar. Thus, in 1878, just one week after the passage of the Act, the Philadelphia Mint struck dollars known as \\\"Morgan dollars.\\\" Georges T. Morgan Morgan succeeded Charles E. Barber (son of William Barber) in 1917

Historical background


UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

During the First World War, the United States stood apart from the conflict. Faced with threatening Germany, the United States entered the war in 1917 and played a decisive role in the victory. The post-war period experienced an extraordinary economic boom which confirms the role of the world's leading commercial and financial power achieved before the First World War. In such euphoria, the economic crisis born in October 1929 led to a real economic paralysis which created seven million unemployed in two years. The election of Roosevelt in 1932 made it possible to overcome the crisis with the interventionist policy of the "New deal" but reduced the influence of the United States on world politics while Europe was sinking into totalitarian regimes. Re-elected in 1940, Roosevelt made the United States the arsenal of democracies, and the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941 threw the American people into World War II..

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