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USA - new issue

Started by Figleaf, November 28, 2008, 11:55:48 PM

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Figleaf

One-Dollar Coin's New Look Will Feature Indian Farming
By MATTHEW HEALEY, Published: November 27, 2008

Corn, beans and squash — the "three sisters" of Native American agricultural tradition — will appear on the nation's one-dollar coins next year, in a design to be announced Friday by the United States Mint.

By the dictates of an act that Congress passed last year, the reverse side of the gold-colored Sacagawea dollars will bear a new design each year starting in 2009, as part of a thematic series showing Native American contributions to the history and development of the United States.

The first coin shows a young Indian woman planting seeds in a field of cornstalks, bean vines and squash. Adopting Indian farming methods proved crucial to European settlers' surviving their early years in America. The coin will enter circulation in January alongside the continuing series of presidential one-dollar coins, which began in 2007 (the ninth coin in that series, with a portrait of William Henry Harrison, will be released in February).

The theme for 2010 will be government. The second coin will show the Great Tree of Peace; a design for it will be approved next year. Future themes, to continue at least through 2016, are being worked on.

The themes are developed by the mint, the National Museum of the American Indian, the National Congress of American Indians and committees in Congress that deal with Indian affairs, said Carla Coolman, a mint spokeswoman.

At first glance, the new coins appear to contain an error: the date is missing from its customary spot next to Sacagawea's face, where it has been since the design was introduced in 2000.

But the omission is deliberate. The law authorizing the new coins decrees that the date, mint mark and motto "E Pluribus Unum" be cut into the edges of the coins, in the same manner as on the presidential dollars. Until now, the edges of the Sacagawea coins had been blank.

The reverse side of the Sacagawea dollar coin will change each year, starting with this design by Norman E. Nemeth.

Source: New York Times
An unidentified coin is a piece of metal. An identified coin is a piece of history.

BC Numismatics

Peter,
  That is a great way to get children into coin collecting.If these are going to circulate,then the spin-off effects will be very beneficial.

Aidan.

chrisild

Interesting design. Like pretty much all $1 coins, it will circulate to a very limited extent only, but at least it won't be hard to get from a collector's POV.

Good thing that the Andrew Jackson presidential dollar has already been issued. Guess they would not want to issue a coin which may remind of the "Indian Removal" policy, and this "Indian" coin, at the same time. ::)

Oh, and call me conservative in this regard, but I like seeing the year on the obverse or reverse of a coin, not the edge ...

Christian

Rangnath

Yes, I agree Christian, with everything you said. 
I've re-read "1491".  I higly recommend it.  It would be easy to create a coin concerning Indians which is either not politically correct, out right insulting, or historically inaccurate.  And my goodness, the date belongs on the OBVERSE!
richie