Maryland Tercentenary Half Dollar |
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After the dry spell of 1929-33,
in which no new commemorative coin types were issued by the United States
Mint, the Maryland half dollar was at the vanguard in 1934. Though it wasn’t the first new issue authorized (that honor
going to the Texas half dollar), it was the first one coined and distributed.
As such, it ushered in a golden age of commemorative coinage that
ultimately collapsed five years later amid speculation and scandal. Numismatists are familiar with
the undated silver coinage issued for the colony of Maryland around 1659 by
Cecil Calvert, the second Lord Baltimore.
It is this same individual who is depicted on the commemorative half
dollar. Some 25 years earlier,
Calvert had sponsored the travel of about 200 colonists from England aboard
the ships Ark and Dove. They
settled in Maryland, a place named for Henrietta Maria, the wife of King
Charles I and sister to King Louis XIII of France.
This name had been selected by Calvert’s father, the first Lord
Baltimore. Sadly, George Calvert
never lived to see the land granted him by the King, nor did Cecil Calvert
himself elect to travel to this new land along the Chesapeake Bay.
It was in fact George’s other son Leonard, Cecil’s brother, who
actually governed Maryland. The mostly Catholic colonists set
sail from England in the summer of 1633 and established the community of St.
Mary’s the following year. The
impending 300th anniversary of this event prompted the founding of the
Maryland Tercentenary Commission in Baltimore.
To assist in funding the celebrations planned for the summer and fall
of 1934, a bill was sponsored by Senators Phillips Lee Goldsborough and
Millard Tydings that would provide for commemorative coins. This became the Act of May 9, 1934, and it authorized the
striking of 25,000 Maryland Tercentenary half dollars. Commissioned to prepare the
models was sculptor Hans Schuler. The
coin was to display a portrait of Cecil Calvert on its obverse and the arms of
Maryland on its reverse. For the
likeness of Lord Baltimore, Schuler borrowed from a painting by Gerard Soes.
This depiction is considered historically inaccurate, especially in
that it shows the Catholic Calvert wearing a Puritan collar! Because Schuler had been hired in
advance of the bill’s passage, his models were already available for review
by the Commission of Fine Arts by the time the coins were authorized.
Amid an atmosphere of great urgency, the Commission’s sculptor
member, Lee Lawrie, tentatively approved the models subject to his minor
revisions. These related to both
the accuracy of the arms and the balanced arrangement of detail elements.
His remarks were transmitted to Schuler, who quickly reworked his
models. Lawrie found fault with
the continued inclusion of 13 stars, as it crowded the legends and bore no
relation to colonial Maryland. He
also made reference to the inaccurate style of collar.
Schuler complied with respect to the stars, but he defended his
modeling of Calvert’s collar on the basis of the Soes painting.
With some misgivings, the Commission of Fine Arts bowed to the pressure
of time and granted final approval to Schuler’s latest models, which had
been submitted May 24. The transfer of these models to
hub reductions was performed by Medallic Art Company of New York City.
The Philadelphia Mint coined 25,015 pieces in July of 1934, the odd 15
being reserved for assay and later destroyed.
The coins were then delivered on July 10th to the Maryland Tercentenary
Commission, which marketed them at $1 apiece both directly and through banks
statewide. A number were sold to
Maryland residents, but most were acquired by coin collectors around the
nation. By the time that all the
celebrations wrapped up in November, some 10,000 coins remained unsold. As the coin program dragged on
into the new year, another 5,000 pieces were sold at the original price of one
dollar. An additional number were
moved at the discounted price of 85 cents apiece.
The Commission then cut its price per coin to 75 cents for those
willing to order in quantity. When
this failed to sell the remaining coins, the price was slashed still further
to only 65 cents per coin in roll quantities.
In this manner, several dealers and boosters of the program squirreled
away large numbers of this issue which may yet turn up in the marketplace. Contemporary correspondence from
the Commission to coin dealer L. W. Hoffecker reveals that the last of the
Maryland halves were sold around the latter part of April, 1935:
“Probably 15,000 of the issue were sold in small quantities—one to
say 100, and they were scattered all over the United States.
In the beginning 5,000 were purchased for Maryland banks, and just how
the banks disposed of them we cannot say, but the 20,000 sold through the
office went mostly to individual collectors, except the probable 8,000 sold at
a discount to dealers.” Maryland half dollars are rarely
encountered in circulated grades, though quite a number have suffered other
forms of abuse over the years. Those
acquired by non-numismatists, and there are many such coins, will exhibit
abrasions on their highest points, particularly on the face of Cecil Calvert.
Some have been polished or cleaned in one fashion or another.
Those not mistreated by their owners may still exhibit abrasions and
contact marks as the result of rough handling at the mint.
Most of the coins seen today grade from MS-60 through MS-64, and those
in higher grades are more elusive. This issue shows obvious signs of
hurried manufacture, which is quite in keeping with its abrupt authorization
and design. Many coins are not
fully struck, and this is most apparent in the features of Lord Baltimore.
Where the coin’s metal has not completely filled the dies, roughness
from the unstruck planchet may remain visible as nicks amid lusterless
surface. When properly coined the Maryland
half dollar can be quite attractive. Its
luster is typically of a satiny character, and it ranges from dull to blazing.
The textured or modelled surfaces of this coin type help to obscure
some of the marks that might otherwise be more obvious to the viewer.
Look for signs of wear on Calvert’s nose, as well as on the top
coronet (with flags) and the adjacent mantling. Unlike many commemorative coin
issues, the packaging for the Maryland half was fairly simple.
Generic, single-piece cardboard holders, manufactured by Dennison and
used for other programs too, were the principal conveyance employed in
delivering mail orders. Other
coins were shipped within tissue paper. Of more value to collectors is the outside mailing envelope.
This is imprinted in four lines: 1634-1934, MARYLAND TERCENTENARY
COMMISSION, 902 UNION TRUST BUILDING, BALTIMORE MARYLAND. SPECIFICATIONS: Diameter: 30.6 millimeters Weight: 12.5 grams Composition: .900 silver, .100
copper Edge: Reeded Net Weight: .36169 ounce pure
silver |


