1879-80 $4 Gold STELLA
FLOWING HAIR & COILED HAIR
In the first half of the
19th-century, Americans were absorbed with western expansion fulfilling
their "Manifest Destiny" to conquer the continent. By the 1870s, the interior
of the country was secure, and the nation's focus began to move beyond
its borders, with increased emphasis on international trade. But global
commerce was hampered by scores of competing coins and currencies, and
many people on both sides of the Atlantic called for a worldwide coinage
system to facilitate trade. In 1867, growing discussion blossomed into
an international conference in Paris, where twenty nations agreed to adopt
a gold standard with the French franc as its base.
Many in Congress envisioned
the United States as the hub of a world monetary system and responded with
their own ideas for an international gold coin, but few proposals went
beyond debate. By 1871, it was silver, not gold, that was on the minds
of many legislators, and silver was not faring well at all. Germany adopted
the gold standard and dumped huge amounts of silver on the market, thereby
depressing its price. At the same time, vast quantities of silver from
the Comstock Lode added to the oversupply. With little industrial use for
the metal, western mine owners desperately needed the U.S. Mint as a customer
and in a big way. Fortunately, they got help from three very cooperative
members of Congress, Representatives Richard Bland, John Kasson and William
Kelley. For over two decades, these three never missed an opportunity to
promote the interests of either silver or nickel mine owners, and they
were often quite successful in their efforts. Kasson and Kelley were partly
responsible for conversion of the dime, quarter, and half dollar to the
metric system in 1873. Although they argued that metric coinage would circulate
worldwide and increase the demand for American silver, the change had little
impact, either on the weight of the coins or their use overseas. The legislation
did have a bonus for the mine owners, however: The silver interests got
free coinage of a Trade dollar for use in the Orient. The Mint made almost
36 million of these large silver pieces between 1873 and 1885, barely enhancing
commerce with the Far East but certainly adding to the mine owners' bottom
lines. The nickel interests also got a gift: With the elimination of the
three and five-cent pieces made of silver, the Mint was limited to using
nickel for those denominations. Five years later, the silver interests
scored again: In 1878, Bland pushed through the Bland-Allison Act, requiring
the government to purchase between two and four million ounces of silver
each month and coin the metal into standard silver dollars. It was Kasson,
though, who was behind another try at an international coinage in 1879.
Attempting to appease advocates of both silver and gold, he proposed a
"goloid" dollar containing 96% silver, 4% gold, and a four-dollar gold
piece of 90% gold, 10% silver. The four-dollar coin was intended to
compete globally with a myriad of similarly valued pieces, including the
French 20 franc coin, the Spanish 20 pesetas, the Dutch and Austrian 8
florins and the Italian 20 lire.
The four-dollar coin received
an entirely new designation: "stella" (Latin for star). This was analogous
to the eagle, "both the star and the eagle being national emblems on our
coins." Like the ten-dollar eagle and its smaller and larger counterparts,
the stella was to be another denominational unit, and other coins would
be expressed in fractions or multiples of it. Along with the stella, patterns
for the "goloid" dollar and a "quintuple stella" (metric double-eagle)
were struck in 1879.
There were two obverse designs
for the stella, one with Flowing Hair engraved by Charles Barber and another
with Coiled Hair by George Morgan. Barber's design depicts Liberty with
long, flowing hair; Morgan's version differs only in that Liberty's hair
is tied in a bun. On both designs, Liberty is encircled by the lettering
*6*G*.3*S*.7*C*7*G*R*A*M*S*, stating the proportions of gold, silver and
copper in the coin. The reverse features a large five-pointed star as the
central motif, with the incuse inscription ONE /STELLA/400/CENT. Both the
U.S. motto E PLURIBUS UNUM and the Latin motto DEO EST GLORIA (God is Glorious)
circle the star, in turn surrounded by the inscriptions UNITED STATES OF
AMERICA and FOUR DOL.
The stella never saw regular
production; Congress killed the legislation and only patterns were made,
all proofs. Unfortunately, mintage records for these pieces have proven
to be unreliable. Today, specialists believe that only 15 originals and
425 "restrikes" of the 1879 Flowing Hair design were made, with the originals
lacking the die striations of the later pieces. These 1879 Flowing Hair
"restrikes" are the most frequently encountered of this denomination, as
all the other issues are exceedingly rare. Surviving 1880 dated Flowing
Hair coins number fewer than 25, and the highest estimates of existing
Coiled Hair pieces are 15 for the 1879 and 10 for the 1880 coins. Whatever
the exact number, 1880 Flowing Hair pieces are at least a dozen times scarcer
than their 1879 counterparts, and Coiled Hair stellas are rarer still,
seldom appearing on the market except in sales of major collections.
Although all four-dollar
gold pieces are patterns, they have nevertheless been incorporated into
the regular series of U.S. coins, similar to 1856 Flying Eagle cents, Gobrecht
dollars and Wire Edge Indian Head eagles. Because of their rarity, however,
they are usually collected as type coins. Only a few wealthy and determined
collectors have ever been lucky enough to be in the right place at the
right time to put together a complete four-piece set of these historic
coins. At the time they were made, stellas were very popular with collectors,
but with the extremely low mintages, there were not enough pieces to go
around. In the early 1880s, newspapers reported that while an average collector
could not acquire a four-dollar gold piece from the Mint at any price,
looped specimens could be seen hanging around the necks of madams operating
some of Washington's most famous bordellos.
Gem specimens of all four
issues exist, but many stellas saw use as jewelry or pocket pieces and
show impairments of some kind. Friction on the design will first show on
the face of Liberty on the obverse and on the star on the reverse. Unlike
the commonly traded bullion coins struck in the latter part of the 19th
and early 20th-centuries, stellas are infrequently seen and always scrutinized,
making counterfeits virtually unknown.
After two years, the four-dollar
gold piece was abandoned by the Mint and forgotten by the public and Congress.
Today, only numismatists remember the dream of a universal coinage system
that created these fascinating coins.