Half cent (United States coin) explained
Country: | United States |
Denomination: | Half cent |
Value: | 0.5 cents or 0.005 |
Unit: | US dollars |
Diameter: | 23.5 |
Thickness: | 2 |
Edge: | - lettered (1793, 1797)
- plain (1794–1857)
- gripped (1797)
|
Composition: | 100% copper |
Years Of Minting: | 1793–1857 |
Obverse: | 1851 half cent obv.jpg |
Obverse Design: | Lady Liberty with braided hair |
Obverse Designer: | Christian Gobrecht |
Obverse Design Date: | 1840 |
Reverse: | 1851 half cent rev.jpg |
Reverse Design: | Denomination surrounded by a wreath |
Reverse Design Date: | 1840 |
Reverse Discontinued: | 1857 |
The half cent was the smallest denomination of United States coin ever minted. It was first minted in 1793 and last minted in 1857. It was minted with five different designs.
History
First authorized by the Coinage Act of 1792 on April 2, 1792,[1] the coin was produced in the United States from 1793 to 1857. The half-cent piece was made of 100% copper and half of a cent, or one two-hundredth of a dollar (five milles). It was slightly smaller than a modern U.S. quarter with diameters 22 mm (1793), 23.5 mm (1794–1836), and 23 mm (1840–1857).[2] They were all produced at the Philadelphia Mint.
The Coinage Act of February 21, 1857 discontinued the half-cent and the similar large cent, and authorized the small cent (Flying Eagle cent).
Design varieties
There are several different types of half cents:
There are no mint marks on any of the coins (all minted at the Philadelphia Mint) and the edges are plain on most half cents. On the 1793, 1794, and some 1795 coins and a variety of the 1797 coin, it was lettered and another 1797 variety had a gripped, or milled, edge.
Mintage figures
Liberty Cap, facing left
Liberty Cap, facing right
- 1794 – 81,600
- 1795 – 139,690
- 1796 – 1,390
- 1797 – 127,840
Draped Bust
- 1800 – 202,908
- 1802 – 20,266
- 1803 – 92,000
- 1804 – 1,055,312
- 1805 – 814,464
- 1806 – 356,000
- 1807 – 476,000
- 1808 – 400,000
Classic Head (Shown at top right)
- 1809 – 1,154,572
- 1810 – 215,000
- 1811 – 63,140
- 1825 – 63,000
- 1826 – 234,000
- 1828 – 606,000
- 1829 – 487,000
- 1831 – 2,200
- 1832 – 51,000
- 1833 – 103,000
- 1834 – 141,000
- 1835 – 398,000
- 1836 – proof only, restrikes were made
- 1837 – No half cents were struck by the United States government; however, due to the need for small change, half-cent tokens were produced by private businessmen.
Braided Hair
- 1840 through 1849 were proof-only issues. There were restrikes made.
- 1849 – 39,864
- 1850 – 39,812
- 1851 – 147,672
- 1852 – proof only. Restrikes were made.
- 1853 – 129,694
- 1854 – 55,358
- 1855 – 56,500
- 1856 – 40,430
- 1857 – 35,180
See also
Sources
- The Half Cent Die State Book 1793–1857 by Ronald P. Manley, Ph.D., 1998.
- American Half Cents – The "Little Half Sisters" (Second Edition) by Roger S. Cohen Jr., 1982.
- Walter Breen's Encyclopedia of United States Half Cents 1793–1857 by Walter Breen, 1983.
- The Half Cent, 1793–1857 The Story of American's Greatest Little Coin by William R. Eckberg, 2019
- The Half Cent Handbook – Draped Bust Varieties 1800–1808 by Ed Fuhrman, 2020.
- The Half Cent Handbook – Classic Head & Braided Hair Varieties by Ed Fuhrman, 2021.
- The Half Cent Handbook – Liberty Cap Varieties 1793–1797 by Ed Fuhrman, 2022.
- The Half Cent Handbook – Errors and Oddities by Ed Fuhrman, 2022.
- The Half Cent Handbook – Ultimate Grading Guide by Ed Fuhrman, 2023.
- The Half Cent Handbook – Ultimate Attribution Guide by Ed Fuhrman, 2023.
External links
- Half Cent information by year and type Histories, photos, mintages, mints, metal contents, edge designs, designers, and more
- Half cent coin pictures, Coin Page Database
- This half cent (numismatics.org:1858.1.1) was the first coin donated to the American Numismatic Society
- Half Cent, Coin Type from United States Photos, mintage, varieties
Notes and References
- Whitman The Official Guide Book 64th Edition 2011 page: #87
- Whitman The Official Guide Book 64th Edition 2011 pages: #87, #89, #90, and #92