Daniel Boone Bicentennial Half Dollar |
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It wasn’t too many years ago
that Daniel Boone was one of the best known figures in American history.
This was due in no small part to a popular television series about his
adventures that featured Fess Parker in the title role.
Today, Boone is probably less well known than most professional
athletes. This is a sad
commentary on current American values, for Daniel Boone was indeed an
important figure whose actions truly lived up to his legend.
That he should appear on a United States commemorative half dollar
seems entirely justified. Of English Quaker heritage, Boone
was born in Reading, Pennsylvania in 1734. Just as young Daniel was approaching adulthood, his family
relocated to the Yadkin Valley of North Carolina. Married to Rebecca Bryant in 1756, he proved an indifferent
farmer but a talented hunter, trapper and general frontiersman.
Service during the French and Indian War on behalf of what were then
still British colonies was followed by exploration of Florida in 1763, a prize
newly acquired from Spain. This region proved disagreeable to Mrs. Boone, and Daniel
commenced his explorations of Kentucky during the years 1769-71.
At that time, Kentucky was as little known to Americans as the
continent of Africa, yet the land held a certain appeal for the young couple.
Boone’s attempt to establish a colony there in 1773 was foiled by
hostile Indians. He persevered
and two years later led 30 armed men in the slicing of a trail from Tennessee
through the wilderness to a site on the Kentucky River they proclaimed
Boonesboro. His forging of the
Wilderness Trail soon prompted other settlers to follow. Although some accommodation had
been made with the Indians, the coming of the American War of Independence in
1775 challenged whatever sense of order that may have existed.
The British Army actively recruited local tribes to harass the
Americans in Kentucky. Boone
himself was captured by the Shawnee in 1778 and taken to the British
headquarters in Detroit. Despite
this action, Daniel’s proficiency at hunting and his familiarity with the
woods was greatly admired by Chief Black Fish, who fashioned for him the name
Big Turtle (evidently a compliment!). Peace
was eventually made between the Americans and Chief Black Fish, an event
depicted on the Boone half dollar. Daniel Boone became a
distinguished figure in the years that followed, even serving several terms in
the state legislature of Virginia (the Kentucky Territory was then within its
jurisdiction). The chaos over
land titles which followed Kentucky’s statehood in 1792 eventually found
Daniel and his family dispossessed, hardly appropriate treatment for the
region’s trailblazer and greatest figure.
Resettling in the new wilderness of Missouri in 1799, the Louisiana
Purchase four years later again left him without clear title to his land.
Recognizing the value of his services to the American people, a
grateful Congress saw to it that a portion of his holdings was returned.
Daniel Boone lived out his remaining years in relative comfort, dying
in 1820, the year that Missouri became a state. In the late spring of 1934,
sculptor Augustus Lukeman was engaged by the Kentucky Daniel Boone
Bicentennial Commission to prepare models for its recently approved coin
honoring the frontiersman. Their
decision led to the first of several controversies surrounding this
commemorative issue. It seems
that Lukeman was given specific instructions that one side should consist of a
portrait of Boone based on Albin Polasek’s bust in the Hall of Fame.
This Lukeman disregarded, instead adapting his own statue of Boone for
the obverse, a portrait which was derived from the frontispiece of a book
titled History of Kentucky. His
model for the reverse included the elements specified by the Commission, but
with historically inaccurate details. When
this was brought to his attention by Commission Secretary C. Frank Dunn, the
artist became quite defensive and indicated that if the sponsors were
dissatisfied, they could return the models to him.
An appeal to the Commission of Fine Arts that another sculptor be
assigned was rejected on the grounds that Lukeman’s designs, while they may
have been historically imperfect, were nevertheless satisfactory as works of
art. In approving the models, the
Commission did, however, prevail upon the artist to make the changes requested
by the coin’s sponsors. He
complied only minimally by removing the dog which had at first accompanied
Boone on the reverse. In its
determination to see the coins minted before the end of the bicentennial year,
the Kentucky Daniel Boone Bicentennial Commission finally ended their protests
and accepted Lukeman’s models as they stood.
On the obverse is a left-facing portrait of Daniel Boone, appealing yet
highly idealized. Arranged around
the periphery are UNITED STATES OF AMERICA and HALF DOLLAR.
On the reverse, full-length figures of Boone and Chief Black Fish face
one another against a backdrop of the Boonesboro blockhouse at left and the
rising sun at right. To the left
is the inscription DANIEL BOONE BICENTENNIAL, to the right the words PIONEER
YEAR. The latter is a reference
to the date 1934, which appears below the figures on coins minted in 1934 and
above the phrase itself on pieces coined during part of 1935 and thereafter
through 1938. IN GOD WE TRUST and
E PLURIBUS UNUM are arranged around the upper periphery. The Act of May 26, 1934 called
for the coining of 600,000 half dollars honoring the bicentennial of Daniel
Boone’s birth. The money raised
from their sale was to be used in restoring four historic sites associated
with Boone and early Kentucky. There
was nothing in the bill which specified the date or mint of coinage, nor was
any sales price dictated. Although
not unusual in such legislation, these omissions would be exploited to their
fullest by the Boone Commission during the commemorative coin mania of the
next few years. The initial coinage dated 1934
amounted to just 10,007 coins struck at the Philadelphia Mint (the odd seven
pieces of this mintage and similar figures for subsequent years represent
coins reserved for assay and later destroyed).
These were sold at $1.60 apiece by Secretary Dunn from an office in
Lexington’s Phoenix Hotel. These
sold reasonably well, yet a new striking of 10,010 halves from the
Philadelphia Mint appeared the following year with the date 1935. This was followed by Denver and San Francisco Mint issues
coined a couple of months later to the amount of 5,005 pieces each.
The prices asked were $1.10, $1.50 and $1.50, respectively.
Of course, the reference to a pioneer year was now irrelevant, since
that year (1934) no longer appeared on the coins.
This was remedied later in 1935, when a small date 1934 was added above
the inscription PIONEER YEAR per new legislation dated August 26, 1935.
10,010 examples of this variety were struck at Philadelphia, but the
Denver and San Francisco Mints coined only 2,003 and 2,004 pieces,
respectively. Highly publicized
as rarities by Secretary Dunn, these were offered at a cost of $3.70 for the
pair. Collectors were surprised
by this development, and some a little annoyed, yet they had no choice but to
order this extra issue if their sets were to be complete. Dunn, claiming that the offering of 2,000 pair had been
oversubscribed, returned most of the checks sent him. Collectors and dealers quickly sensed that a fraud had been
perpetrated against them, as so few persons received their coins from the
Commission, yet a handful of dealers, Dunn included, just happened to have
some available at their new market level of up to $50 for the pair! This episode set the tone for
future offerings of this and other “serial” commemoratives of the
mid-to-late 1930s. With nothing
to prevent further coinings of the Boone halves, new editions were put out
annually in three-piece sets through 1938.
Both prices and ordering options varied from year to year, creating
much confusion and resentment. Congress
finally put an end to this abuse in 1939 with the passage of a bill
prohibiting the further minting of any commemorative coins authorized prior to
that date. Boone halves are found with a
number of differing surface textures and a wide variance in luster.
Some are prooflike, some have a chrome or satin finish, and a number
will display dull, semi-matte surfaces. Conventional,
frosty luster, with its accompanying “cartwheel” effect, is primarily
limited to the Philadelphia Mint issues, although there are a few exceptions.
Most pieces are well struck, yet weakness may occur in the Indian’s
head and hand. All of the dates
within the series seem to be available in grades up through MS-65, but their
numbers drop off quite a bit at higher levels.
Coins struck in Philadelphia from 1934 through 1937 were often sold to
the general public, and such pieces, particularly the 1934 issue, may show
signs of mishandling. The branch
mint halves are more often found choice.
The first signs of wear on the obverse will appear on the hair behind
Boone’s ear; on the reverse, check for wear on the shoulder of Black Fish. SPECIFICATIONS: Diameter: 30.6 millimeters Weight: 12.5 grams Composition: .900 silver, .100
copper Edge: Reeded Net Weight: .36169 ounce pure
silver |



