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Denver Gold and Silver Coins
600 South Holly Street Suite 103
Denver, Colorado 80246
Open Monday - Thursday from 9 am to 6 pm
Friday and Sunday from 9 am to 4 pm
Call
anytime - leave a message: 303-835-8892
- Dime 10 Cents Winged Liberty Head (Mercury) (19161945)
1936 Winged Liberty Head (Mercury) dime
Although most commonly referred to as the Mercury dime, the coin does
not depict the Roman messenger god. The obverse figure is a depiction
of the mythological goddess Liberty wearing a Phrygian cap, a classic
symbol of liberty and freedom, with its wings intended to symbolize
freedom of thought. Designed by noted sculptor Adolph A. Weinman, the
Winged Liberty Head dime is considered by many to be one of the most
beautiful U.S. coin designs ever produced. The composition (90
percent silver, 10 percent copper) and diameter (17.9 millimeters) of
the Mercury dime was unchanged from the Barber dime.
Weinman (who had studied under Augustus Saint-Gaudens) won a 1915
competition against two other artists for the design job, and is
thought to have modeled his version of Liberty on Elsie Kachel
Stevens, wife of noted poet Wallace Stevens. The reverse design, a
fasces juxtaposed with an olive branch, was intended to symbolize
America's readiness for war, combined with its desire for peace.
Although the fasces symbol was later adopted by Benito Mussolini and
his National Fascist Party, the symbol was quite common in American
iconography and has generally avoided any stigma associated with its
usage in wartime Italy.
The 1916-D issue of only 264,000 coins is highly sought after, due
largely to the fact that the overwhelming majority of the dimes
struck at the Denver Mint in 1916 carried the pre-existing Barber
design. Thus, the 1916-D is worth up to thousands of dollars if it
is in relatively fine condition.
Many coins in the Mercury series exhibit striking defects, most
notably the fact that the line separating the two horizontal bands in
the center of the fasces is often missing, in whole or in part; the
1945 issue of the Philadelphia Mint hardly ever appears with this line
complete from left to right, and as a result, such coins are worth
more than usual for uncirculated specimens. A valuable variety is an
overdate, where 1942 was stamped over a 1941 die at the Philadelphia
mint. A less obvious example from the same year is from the Denver
mint.
Of particular interest to numismatics is the condition of the
horizontal bands tying together the bundle on the fasces, on the
coin's reverse. On well-struck examples, separation exists within
the two sets of bands (known as Full Split Bands). Coins exhibiting
this feature are typically valued higher than those without it.
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