Lewis & Clark Exposition Gold Dollar |
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When President Thomas Jefferson
asked Congress in January, 1803, to appropriate $2500 for an exploratory
expedition into the Pacific Northwest, negotiations to purchase the Louisiana
Territory had not yet begun. Not
that Jefferson didn’t have plans afoot: His long-term fascination with the
oft-advanced theory of a water route from the Mississippi River to the Pacific
Ocean became even stronger when he learned of Spain’s secret ceding of
Louisiana to France. Concerned about the aggressive Napoleon’s motives, he
dispatched James Monroe with instructions to purchase West Florida and New
Orleans from the French. Fortunately for the United States, Monroe found
Napoleon frustrated by a slave revolt in Haiti and the resumption of
hostilities with Great Britain. The Emperor was only too happy to exchange all
of France’s holdings for much needed cash to finance his adventures in
Europe. As word reached America of the sale, plans for the Northwest
exploration were well underway, placing added significance on the venture. Jefferson put his personal
secretary, Army Captain Meriwether Lewis, in charge of the expedition. Lewis
chose his friend Captain William Clark as his partner and co-leader on the
trek. On May 4, 1804, the two explorers and their party of mostly soldiers and
frontiersmen set off up the Missouri River. Reaching an area near present day
Bismarck, North Dakota by the end of October, they wintered with the Mandan
Indians of the region. Apparently, they were made quite comfortable by the
natives, as traces of the explorers’ visit were visible in the physical
characteristics of many upper Missouri Valley inhabitants for many years
afterward. With the help of Sacagawea, the Shoshone Indian wife of the
party’s French interpreter, the expedition crossed the Rocky Mountains and
explored the Snake and Columbia Rivers. They spent the winter of 1805 in a
military outpost on the Pacific coast. In the spring of 1806 the party
recrossed the Rockies, explored the Yellowstone, and after traversing more
than 6,000 miles in two years and four months, arrived in St. Louis again on
September 23. Their return was greeted with jubilation, as many had believed
them long dead. Lewis and Clark were the first of
the trailblazers of the 19th century, men who made it possible for other
discoverers to push the limits of American expansion. The tale of their
expedition is inextricably linked to the fortuitous purchase of the vast
Louisiana Territory in 1803. And so it was one hundred years later when
centennial celebrations were held for both events. The purchase of Louisiana
was celebrated by a world’s fair held in St. Louis in 1904, and the travels
of Lewis and Clark were commemorated at a national fair in Portland, Oregon
the following year. The appropriations bill for the
Lewis and Clark centennial celebration passed Congress on April 13, 1904. It
also provided for the minting of a maximum of 250,000 gold dollars that would
bear likenesses of the two explorers. The result was the first, and to-date
only, two-headed U.S. coin. Designed and modeled by the Philadelphia Mint’s
Chief Engraver Charles Barber, the obverse bears a portrait of Lewis, and the
reverse depicts Clark. Barber reportedly based the portraits on paintings of
the two men done by Charles Wilson Peale. Statutory legends surround the
portraits on both sides: LEWIS-CLARK EXPOSITION PORTLAND ORE. on the obverse,
and UNITED STATES OF AMERICA and ONE DOLLAR on the reverse. The date appears
below Lewis’ portrait. All of the Lewis and Clark
dollars were struck in the Philadelphia Mint. In September 1904, 25,000 pieces
were produced bearing that year’s date, a curious occurrence, as the coins
remained in the Mint’s vaults until the fair opened on June 1, 1905. Just as
with the Louisiana Purchase dollars, numismatic entrepreneur Farran Zerbe was
again placed in charge of the distribution of the coins at the exposition. As
he had done with the Louisiana dollars, Zerbe enthusiastically promoted the
Lewis and Clark coins. Learning a lesson from the sluggish sale of the
Louisiana pieces that were issued at $3 each, the Lewis and Clark dollars sold
for $2 per coin. Zerbe soon raised that to $2.50 by publishing the fiction
that the 1904 issue was almost sold out. Few cared and even fewer bothered
with the 1905 issue when it debuted at $2 per coin or $10 for 6 pieces. When
the dust had settled and the exposition closed October 14, 1905, a total of
60,000 Lewis and Clark dollars had been struck: 25,028 of the 1904 coins and
35,041 dated 1905. The odd 28 and 41 pieces were reserved for assay. Of the
1904 issue 15,003 pieces were melted, leaving a net mintage of only 9,997. An
even higher percentage of the 1905 dated coins—25,000—entered the melting
pot, leaving a net figure of only 10,000 for that year. Very little is known about the
fate of these diminutive coins. They were largely ignored by the numismatic
press of the day and disdained by collectors who had seen the value of their
Louisiana Purchase coins drop from the $3 issue price to $2 by the time the
Portland exposition opened. Their desire to complete the commemorative gold
dollar series was obviously outweighed by an aversion to risk further losses
on the Lewis and Clark coins. While 10,000 pieces of each date were
distributed, surprisingly few choice uncirculated examples exist. Apparently,
most of the coins were sold on the fair grounds to the non-collecting public
who did little to preserve these souvenirs over the years. Many were also
worked into jewelry as broaches and stickpins; some were even mounted in
silver spoons. While interesting as ephemera from the exposition, such mounted
pieces are of little numismatic value. Most Lewis and Clark gold dollars are
found in grades XF-AU, with occasional MS-60 through 63 specimens appearing.
MS-64 pieces are very scarce, and gem MS-65 or higher examples are rarely
encountered. In grades above MS-62, the 1905 issue is decidedly rarer. Perhaps
many of these unwanted second-year coins found their way into circulation
during the Depression or suffered a more numismatically sacrilegious end in
the melting pot after 1933. The portraits of the explorers
are the first areas to show friction from handling or circulation. Typical
surface luster covers the full spectrum, ranging from prooflike or semi-prooflike
to frosty or dull satiny. Brilliant proofs exist: reportedly no more than four
pieces of each year. Such coins display far greater design detail than
ordinary business strikes. Because of the elusiveness of both years,
counterfeits are known: some surfaced in the early 1960s, and although most
were confiscated by the Secret Service, occasionally one is still seen today.
These pieces are somewhat porous, with irregularly placed lettering and
abnormally weak devices. Ironically, the Lewis and Clark
gold dollars, viewed as an afterthought to the Louisiana Purchase
commemoratives of 1903 and slighted by collectors of that era, are highly
regarded by the numismatic community of today. The poor reception afforded the
coins at time of issue virtually guaranteed their rarity for future
generations; in fact, they are the rarest gold dollars in the commemorative
series. Despite Barber’s mundane portraits and Zerbe’s largely ineffectual
attempts to market the coins, the Lewis and Clark commemorative gold dollars
have finally gained the respect of collectors that they so well deserve. SPECIFICATIONS: Diameter: 15 millimeters Weight: 1.672 grams Composition: .900 gold, .100
copper Edge: Reeded Net Weight: .04837 ounce pure
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