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Quarter Eagles

1911-D $2.50 NGC MS63
Please call: 1-941-291-2156
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1911-D $2.50
NGC MS63
Coin ID: RC3821001
Inquire Price: 19,000.00 - SOLD - 3/28/2012*
Free Shipping and Insurance for coins at $10K or above.

. The surfaces are clean for the grade with no individual marks worthy of mention. The strike is above average with full details on the feathers in the headdress and most of the eagles wing. Most of the mint state survivors of this date are found in MS61 and 62 conditions. This premium quality coin is tied for second finest.
The new Indian Head quarter eagle was put into production in 1908. Theodore Roosevelt, who had become president as a result of McKinleys assassination in 1901 and was in his second term of office, believed that it was time to reform all United States coinage, which in his opinion was atrociously hideous. He wanted to put into place his pet crime, to improve coinage designs by bypassing the mediocre Mint Engraver, Charles Barber. Earlier Roosevelt prevailed on the world-renown sculptor, Augustus Saint-Gaudens, to remake the gold eagle and double eagle coins. Now, influenced by Dr. William Sturgis Bigelow, a friend and art connoisseur, Roosevelt agreed to have Bela Lyon Pratt redesign the gold half eagle and quarter eagle. Roosevelt got the idea of making the coins incuse, like certain ancient Egyptian coins. Certainly this new design would make them different from the coinage that come before.

Bela Lyon Pratt designed this coin and the similar half eagle. They were different from what had preceded. The background of the prior issues had become the foreground. The design was sunk into the field and shown in relief. The design was not popular with the public. It was an innovation never previously used on circulating United States coinage, and it was criticized by people in banking and numismatics. They felt that the new coins could be easily counterfeited, wouldnt stack easily, and were unsanitary because dirt would remain in the incused features. They also felt that the design was not natural. However, as a whole, the public was indifferent to the new coins, and the Indian Head quarter eagle coins remained in production and in circulation until 1929, when the Great Depression caused economic upheaval.

In 1905 William Bigelow, an art connoisseur and friend of President Theodore Roosevelt, was sent to evaluate a large art collection that was donated to the government. Following this project, Roosevelt sought Bigelows advice on coinage designs. Bigelow commissioned his friend Bela Lyon Pratt to make the new coins. Pratt was an accomplished sculptor and medal maker. He had studied under Saint-Gaudens and was also his assistant. In 1890, at the suggestion of Saint-Gaudens, he went to study in Paris at the Ecole des Beau Arts, where he received many awards for his work. In 1893 he returned to America where he sculpted for the Columbian Exposition. Later he became an instructor at the Boston Museum School.

His works include a medal for Harvard President Eliot, a bicentennial medal for Yale University, a figure for the Sears Monument in Cambridge, and many other sculptures, busts, and medals. At the Panama-Pacific Exposition in 1915, he had an exhibit of seventeen pieces that won a gold medal.

The quarter eagle design was similar to his half eagle. He chose an authentic looking Indian brave in profile looking left wearing a realistic headdress. Above is the word LIBERTY and below is the date. Six stars are on the left and seven are on the right. The reverse, in homage to Saint-Gaudens, shows the standing eagle facing left. Below it are arrows and an olive branch. E PLURIBUS UNUM is in the left field and IN GOD WE TRUST is in the right. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, separated by dots, arcs above the eagle, and the denomination 2 DOLLARS is below. The mintmark is at the rim to the left of the arrows.

The 1911-D quarter eagle had an original mintage of 55,680, which is significantly less than the next lowest mintage of 240,000 for the 1914 piece. In its population report, NGC shows 11 in MS63 with 14 better.


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