- St. Gaudens Double Eagle
The St. Gaudens Double Eagle is twenty dollar
gold coin , orDouble Eagle , produced by theUnited States Mint from 1907–1933. The St. Gaudens is named after its designer, the sculptorAugustus St. Gaudens , who designed theobverse and reverse . St. Gaudens' mark appears on the obverse of the coin under the date.pecifications
*Obverse Design:
Lady Liberty holding the Torch of Freedom and anolive branch with theUnited States Capitol in the background
*Reverse Design: ABald Eagle flying over thesun
*Edge: Lettered with 'E Pluribus Unum ' and stars
*Weight: 33.436 grams (516 grains) (1.075troy ounces )
*Diameter: 34 millimeters
*Composition: 90% gold, 10% copper
*Gold Content: ~30.093 grams (464.4 grains) (0.9675 troy ounces)History
At the turn of the 20th century, President
Theodore Roosevelt decided to start an effort to beautify American coinage. He hired Augustus St. Gaudens to overhaul American designs. St. Gaudens only lived to finish the double eagle and theIndian Eagle . These two designs are considered by some to be the best designs of their denominations and some of the best of any American coin ever. The double eagle design was voted the best American gold coin design and is currently used on Americangold bullion coinage.The original coinage of 1907 had an ultra high
relief as the artist intended. However, when the Mint struck some coins, they required repeated striking by the presses, and had more the appearance of medals than coins. [http://www.coinfacts.com/historical_notes/frank_leach.htm] One alternative explored by the mint was reducing the diameter of the coin to that of a checker and making it thicker in an attempt to keep the ultra high relief. Some trials were struck, but most were destroyed (except two which were retained in the Mint collection) when it was discovered that consent of Congress was required to change the diameter of any coin. St. Gaudens redesigned the coin for a lower relief, but when some of these "high relief" coins were struck, they would not stack well, and the design was flattened again by St. Gaudens for circulating coins. Some of the high relief coins, though, found their way into circulation. The coins were minted continuously until 1933, except for 1917-19, when no coins were struck."Godless" Eagle
In 1907 and 1908, a number of eagle and double eagle coins were minted without the motto of "
In God We Trust ". At that time, the coinage laws did not require the motto, and so St. Gaudens had not been asked to include it. Roosevelt defended the omission as a prevention of a profane use of God's name, but in 1908, Congress passed an act requiring the use of the motto on all denominations of coins on which the motto had previously appeared--including the eagle and double eagle. The reverse of the coin was redesigned to include the motto. [http://www.coinfacts.com/historical_notes/frank_leach.htm]Mints
The
mintmark appears above the date between the second and third numbers.
*Blank (P -Philadelphia Mint inPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania )
*D (Denver Mint inDenver, Colorado )
*S (San Francisco Mint inSan Francisco, California )The Lone 1933 Survivor
When President
Franklin Delano Roosevelt ordered the United States off thegold standard in 1933, many coins of the last four years of the series were melted. Nearly all the 1933 coins were melted (with perhaps 20-30 escaping), but one ended up in the collection ofKing Farouk ofEgypt . When Farouk's collection wasauction ed off, the coin disappeared, probably because it was illegal to own. In 2002 this coin sold at auction bySotheby's inNew York City for $7,590,020. This makes the 1933 St. Gaudens Double Eagle the most valuable coin in the world.The sale followed an agreement between the then-owner and the US Government to allow this one specimen to remain privately owned. Over the years, several specimens had been confiscated by the Secret Service on the grounds that the government deemed them to have not been legitimately issued.
The auction price for that specimen included a $20 payment to the Treasury to give the coin legal tender status.
pecial Varieties/Errors
In this series there are only two varieties/errors to mention:
*MCMVII (1907-P) with high relief
*1909 over 8Rarities
In the series, besides the 1933, there are nine dates that are rare and command higher prices. Most are from the last four years of production that were never released in large numbers before President Roosevelt ordered existing stocks of gold coins melted.
*MCMVII (1907-P) - High Relief
*1920-S
*1921-P
*1927-D
*1927-S
*1929-P
*1930-S
*1931-P
*1931-D
*1932-PFirsts
The coin was the first US coin to include Roman numerals for the date (on early 1907 coins only).
The coin was the first gold coin to include the mintmark on the obverse (the mintmark had been briefly included on some of the Bust coins in the 1830s)
=References=
*Yeoman, R.S. "A Guide Book of United States Coins" Atlanta: Whitman Publishing, 2004
*Edler, Joel and Harper, Dave "U.S. Coin Digest" Iola: Krause Publications, 2004External links
* [http://www.pcgs.com/prices/frame.chtml?type=date&filename=saint_gaudens_twenty PCGS Price Guide for St. Gaudens Double Eagles]
* [http://coinfacts.com/double_eagles/saint_gaudens.htm St. Gaudens Double Eagle Mintages at coinfacts.com]
* [http://www.coinpage.com/gaudens-pictures.html St. Gaudens Double Eagle Pictures]###@@@KEY@@@###succession box | title=Double Eagle Coin of the United States (1907-1933)
----Concurrent with:
Liberty Head Double Eagle (1907)
before=Liberty Head Double Eagle | after=Denomination Abolished | years=
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