Oregon Trail Memorial Half Dollar |
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For at least a decade before the
California gold rush of 1849, there was a growing migration of settlers to the
West. Most of these pioneers were
bound for the rich farmland of the Willamette Valley in the Oregon territory
and followed a route which stretched over 2,000 miles from Independence,
Missouri to Fort Vancouver, now Vancouver, Washington.
Crossing the continent on this Oregon Trail was an arduous undertaking
in the 1840s, made even more perilous by non-existent roads and the constant
threat of violent storms, prairie fires, dysentery and cholera, not to mention
sporadic Indian attacks. Travelers
on the trail organized themselves into small companies to better fend off the
many hazards en route. Due to the
rigors of the trip, many did not make it the whole way.
But the promise of a new beginning was at the end of the journey, and
this spurred on a continuing exodus. As
difficult as it was, more than 6,000 people used the trail by 1846.
Only the discovery of gold in California in 1848 reduced the flow of
traffic. In 1926, a New York corporation
calling itself the Oregon Trail Memorial Association, Inc. petitioned Congress
to authorize a half dollar to “commemorate the heroism of our fathers and
mothers who traversed the Oregon Trail to the far West with great hardship,
daring, and loss of life, which not only resulted in adding new states to the
Union, but earned a well-deserved and imperishable fame for the pioneers...”
The Association, whose president was the pioneer Ezra Meeker (who made
the journey in 1851), ostensibly sought to use the funds raised to erect
monuments along the route. Subsequent
events proved that the promoters had little more than unbridled greed on their
minds. Congress, however, was
apparently satisfied that the commemoration was of national significance, and
passed legislation on May 17, 1926 authorizing the coining of
“no more than six million” coins.
Thus, the Oregon Trail Commemorative Half Dollar was born—along with
the beginning of a speculator rush for limited edition coins. The design was completed by the
famed husband and wife team of James Earle and Laura Gardin Fraser.
Mrs. Fraser had designed several commemorative coins, notably the 1922
Grant half dollar and dollar, and her husband, who is credited with the
obverse design of the Oregon Trail half, is remembered for creating one of the
most memorable of all modern coin designs, the Buffalo nickel. The obverse of the coin (which
was considered the reverse by the Frasers, but not by the Mint) depicts a
Conestoga wagon drawn by oxen, heading into a setting sun.
The motto IN GOD WE TRUST arcs above at the rim and below the wagon is
OREGON TRAIL MEMORIAL and the date. The
designers’ initials appear behind the wagon. The reverse features a
dramatically rendered Indian, standing erect with outstretched arm as if to
say “stop.” The Indian is superimposed on a map of the U.S.
depicting a line of Conestoga wagons heading West.
The inscription UNITED STATES OF AMERICA is placed around the Indian,
and HALF DOLLAR arcs below at the rim. The
overall design of the coin is considered one of the most beautiful and truly
“American” in U.S. coinage. Enthusiastically approving the
Frasers’ design, the Federal Commission of Fine Arts (charged since 1921
with overseeing the design of coins and medals) sent the models directly to
the Medallic Art Company of New York to make mechanical reductions.
The hubs were then shipped to the Philadelphia Mint, and in September
of 1926, 48,000 coins were struck, along with 30 pieces reserved for assay.
This issue became known as the “Ezra Meeker issue,” as it was
struck 75 years after Meeker’s initial trek along the trail.
Meeker made the journey again in 1907, when he set out from his Oregon
home, purportedly to scout for locations for commemorative plaques. The coins, sold at $1 each,
became an instant hit with the public, so much so that another issue was
prepared for emission from the San Francisco Mint. The Association’s logic was that those who bought the
Philadelphia issues would most certainly desire the San Francisco coins.
October saw the first of 100,000 pieces from the western mint go to the
Association for resale to the public (mintmarks appear to the right of the F
in HALF). But enthusiasm quickly waned, and few coins sold at the issue price.
The Treasury became aware of the unsold coins and ordered the Mints to
cease production until all the 1926-S issues were sold, which explains why no
coins were struck in 1927. Yet,
the Association kept exerting pressure on the Treasury, which led to the
manufacture of 50,000 coins in 1928. These
were named the “Jedediah Smith Issue,” as a tribute to one of the more
famous Western explorers. By this
time, the Treasury had seen the error of its ways and refused to strike any
future issues. The 1928-dated
coins remained in their vaults for another five years. In 1933, the Commission again exerted considerable pressure
to strike coins, and with the melting of the remaining 17,000 1926-S issues,
paved the way for the release of the 1928 coins. Back-room politics have figured
in many a decision at the Mint over the years, but the Oregon Trail
commemorative program became the biggest abuser in the system.
Once again, the Association was authorized to strike yet another issue,
this one bearing the date 1933 and struck at the Denver Mint. The plan was to
offer the mintage of 5,250 coins to visitors at the Century of Progress
Exposition, at a cost of $2 each. These
became an instant disaster and were sold mostly to speculators by the Scott
Stamp and Coin Company of New York. The
Scott Company was also charged with liquidating the 1928 issues, but managed
to sell only 6,000 coins. Ultimately,
44,000 of the 1928 coins went into the melting pot. 1934 saw the Denver Mint strike
7,000 coins, known as the “Fort Hall, Ft. Laramie and Jason Lee Issue.”
This pattern was repeated in 1936 in Philadelphia (10,000) and San
Francisco (5,000), again in 1937 in Denver (12,000), and finally with a
three-piece set containing one coin from each of the three mints in 1938
(6,000) and 1939 (3,000). The obvious abuses, profiteering
and behind-the-scenes political maneuvering didn’t sit well with collectors
of the day, but the relatively low mintages of the later issues kept sales
brisk. Sales to speculators were
the rule, however, as individuals played leapfrog to get the new 1937 issues.
The Association, who had previously given Scott Stamp & Coin the
rights for distribution, again took over the sales of the later dates,
decrying the greedy dealers trying to take advantage of the public.
This arrangement did not work out as well as their initial distribution
experience, and as late as 1943, other patriotic societies were trying to sell
the coins to new buyers who were unaware of the earlier issues.
But when the last Oregon Trail half was struck in 1939, its on-and-off,
fourteen-year run had witnessed a total of only 264,419 coins minted, of which
61,317 were eventually melted, leaving a net mintage of just 202,928
pieces—less than 4% of the number originally authorized. Today, the 14 Oregon Trail issues
are often collected as a subset within the commemorative series.
Most are available in the higher mint state grades, many exhibiting
attractive toning from years of storage.
Strike is not often a problem, with the exception of the 1926
Philadelphia issue which was poorly executed, causing a noticeable lack of
detail on the Indian’s hand. Deep, frosty luster is the norm, but semi-prooflike
surfaces on the 1926-S and some branch mint issues of the 1930s are also
characteristic. Points to first
show wear are the Indian’s hand and thigh on the obverse and the ox and the
bows of the wagon’s cover on the reverse.
Oregon Trail halves were
distributed in cardboard holders imprinted with the manufacturer’s name and,
in some cases, the Association’s name and address as well.
These holders have spaces for three coins and were cut into thirds for
single pieces. Typically,
original mailing envelopes will show postmarks dated long after the issues
were struck. SPECIFICATIONS: Diameter: 30.6 millimeters Weight: 12.5 grams Composition: .900 silver, .100
copper Edge: Reeded Net Weight: .36169 ounce pure
silver |



