Lexington-Concord Sesquicentennial Half Dollar |
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“The shot heard around the
world” was fired on April 19, 1775 at Lexington, Massachusetts. Although
this engagement and the one that followed at neighboring Concord weighed
against the Americans, their willingness to fight for their rights was at last
put to the crucial test, and there was no going back. These initial skirmishes of the
American War of Independence came about after years of wrangling between the
colonists and the British motherland over irritating taxes and other perceived
abuses. The passage of the
“Coersive Acts” in 1774 led to the assembly of the First Continental
Congress, which met to determine what action should be taken.
Sensing that resistence to these new laws would be met with force,
Massachusetts formed a Committee of Safety headed by the bold John Hancock.
A special militia of “Minute Men” was recruited that would be
prepared to take arms on short notice. The British, aware of munitions
being stockpiled by the colonists at several locations, drew plans to destroy
these arsenals. Their first
target was Concord, 21 miles from Boston by road.
Early on the morning of April 19, 1775, a force of 700 British troops
left Boston headed for Concord. The
Committee of Safety, alerted to their mission by its informers, dispatched
Paul Revere and William Dawes to summon the Minute Men. Reaching Lexington around midnight, Revere notified John
Hancock and Sam Adams of the danger they faced as the targets of royal wrath.
Joined by Dr. Samuel Prescott, Revere and Dawes then continued on
toward Concord. Luck was not with
them that night. Confronted by a
British patrol, Revere was captured and Dawes was forced to flee.
It was Prescott alone who made his way through to warn the residents of
Concord. Reaching Lexington, an advance
force of British troops was confronted by armed Minute Men.
The Americans were ordered to lay down their weapons and disperse,
whereupon a shot rang out, and the British responded with several devastating
volleys. Stunned, the unseasoned
volunteers scarcely responded, and soon eight Americans lay dead.
Only one British soldier was wounded.
Unfazed by this engagement, the British continued their march toward
Concord to join up with additional units.
There, the troops carried out the destruction of whatever military
stores they could find before making their return to Boston.
By this time, it was high noon. Largely
unopposed up to this point, the British now came under the harassing sniper
fire of an angered civilian populace. Only
by acquiring reinforcements at Lexington were the British able to avoid a
total rout and massacre. Such was
the determination of Americans to defend their soil and their rights. As the 150th anniversary of these
battles approached, commemorative coins were sought by each of two civic
groups from the towns of Lexington and Concord. Ultimately joining forces as the United States
Lexington-Concord Sesquicentennial Commission, they contracted with sculptor
Chester Beach (creator of the 1923-S Monroe Doctrine Centennial half dollar
and the 1928 Hawaii Sesquicentennial half dollar) to prepare models based on
their sketches. These depicted
Daniel Chester French’s statue of a Minute Man titled The Grand Concord Man,
chosen for the obverse, and the Old Belfry in Lexington from which a single
lantern had been lit to warn of the oncoming British, this for the reverse.
The coin as ultimately struck looks remarkably similar to the sketches
furnished to Beach, even though the artist initially countered with distinctly
different depictions of the same two elements.
It was only after the usual exchange of correspondence between
sculptor, committee and the Commission of Fine Arts that the final arrangement
of lettering and other minor features was settled.
The sculptor member of the Commission, James Earle Fraser of Buffalo
nickel fame, argued that the artist ought to be given a free hand in deciding
what elements worked best. This
plea was seemingly repeated with each new commemorative design, only to be
again overruled by politicians and local committees. In addition to the Minute Man
statue, the obverse of this issue includes the legends UNITED STATES OF
AMERICA and PATRIOT HALF DOLLAR separated by stars and the words CONCORD
MINUTE MAN. The motto IN GOD WE
TRUST completes the design. Its
reverse is dominated by the famous belfry with the inscription OLD BELFRY,
LEXINGTON. Around the borders are
the inscription LEXINGTON-CONCORD SESQUICENTENNIAL and the dual dates
1775-1925. Beach’s initials are
conspicuously absent. In the meantime, a bill calling
for the minting of not more than 300,000 Lexington-Concord half dollars was
passed by Congress on January 14, 1925. Only
162,099 pieces were actually coined at the Philadelphia Mint during April and
May of that year, the odd 99 coins being reserved for the annual assay.
From April 18 to 20, a sesquicentennial fair was held at the sites of
the historic battles. A total of
60,000 coins were sold during those three days, 39,000 in Lexington and 21,000
to fairgoers in Concord. The
remaining halves were offered throughout New England and some outlying areas,
with these additional sales nearly reaching the number coined.
The remaining balance of the 300,000 coins authorized was never
produced, as demand for this issue was met with the pieces on hand.
Just 86 coins were returned to the mint for melting, leaving a net
distribution of 161,914 half dollars. These halves were originally
issued at $1 apiece in small, wooden boxes with a sliding lid.
A line drawing of the Concord Minute Man was stamped in blue ink on the
top, and the Old Belfry appeared on the bottom.
Many of these boxes have been lost over the years, and they have become
collectibles in their own right. Other
forms of custom packaging were employed by various commercial distributors at
the time of issue. A single matte
proof specimen is rumored to exist from the estate of Chief Sculptor-Engraver
John R. Sinnock, who was known to have such coins made for his own collection. Despite the protests of Chester
Beach and James Earle Fraser, the Lexington-Concord half dollar is a handsome
coin, one which has always appealed to collectors. It is readily available in the higher circulated grades of VF
through AU and in the lower uncirculated grades of MS-60 through MS-64.
Coins grading MS-65 and above, however, are quite elusive.
With so many of this issue sold to the general public rather than to
numismatists, many have been mishandled or harshly cleaned.
Points to check for wear include the Minute Man’s thighs and the near
corner of the belfry, particularly toward its top.
These same highpoints may also show weakness of strike. SPECIFICATIONS: Diameter: 30.6 millimeters Weight: 12.5 grams Composition: .900 silver, .100
copper Edge: Reeded Net Weight: .36169 ounce pure
silver |



