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Gary's MS-65 & 66 Morgan Gems

Category:  Other
Owner:  coinsbygary
Last Modified:  11/27/2012
Set Description
Relatively inexpensive high-grade Morgan dollars.

Set Goals
This set is a collection of 24 MS-65 & MS-66 Morgan Dollars with an average purchase price of about $200 per coin. The exceptions in this set are an MS-65 GSA 1882-CC, MS-65 GSA 1883-CC, and a Battle Creek rainbow toned MS-65, all of which have values well above $200. This set has at least one gem quality coin from each of the following mints, Philadelphia, New Orleans, Carson City, and San Francisco.

Slot Name
Origin/Country
Item Description
Full Grade
Owner Comments
Pics
View Coin 1878-S United States $1 1878 S PCGS MS 65
View Coin 1879-S United States $1 1879 S PCGS MS 66
View Coin 1880-S United States $1 1880 S NGC MS 66
View Coin 1881-S United States $1 1881 S NGC MS 66
View Coin 1882-CC United States $1 1882 CC GSA HOARD NGC MS 65
View Coin 1882-S United States $1 1882 S NGC MS 66
View Coin 1883 United States $1 1883 PCGS MS 65
View Coin 1883-CC United States $1 1883 CC GSA HOARD NGC MS 65
View Coin 1883-O United States $1 1883 O NGC MS 65
View Coin 1884-O United States $1 1884 O NGC MS 65
View Coin 1885 United States $1 1885 PCGS MS 65
View Coin 1885-O United States $1 1885 O NGC MS 65 PL
View Coin 1886 United States $1 1886 NGC MS 65
View Coin 1887 United States $1 1887 NGC MS 65
View Coin 1888 United States $1 1888 NGC MS 65
View Coin 1896 United States $1 1896 PCGS MS 65 In anticipation of the return of the silver dollar as a circulating coin, Mint Director Henry Linderman hired George T. Morgan in 1876 as an assistant engraver for the express purpose of designing a new silver dollar. Shortly thereafter, Morgan finished the reverse design, but the obverse design of the new dollar would be quite another issue. Then later in 1876 through a common friend, Thomas Eakins, Morgan found in the facial profile of Miss Anna W. Williams the perfect representation of the “Goddess of Liberty” for his dollar coin.

Miss Anna Williams, an art student in Philadelphia, was a modest 18-year-old girl. She did not crave notoriety or fame, but rather desired to pursue her passion as a schoolteacher in relative obscurity. When first asked to model for Morgan, she soundly refused. Through the encouragement of her friend Thomas Eakins, she finally agreed to model for Morgan under the stipulation that her identity remained anonymous. The official cover story would be that Morgan got the inspiration for his dollar from a Greek figure at the Philadelphia Academy of Art.

With final approval for the silver dollar design and passage of the Bland-Allison Act occurring on the same day, minting of the Morgan Dollar began in 1878. Unfortunately, the secret identity of “Lady Liberty” on the Morgan Dollar would be short-lived and in the summer of 1879, a Philadelphia newspaper revealed Anna Williams identity and dubbed her “The Silver Dollar Girl”.

This in turn brought a deluge of unwanted attention to Miss Anna W. Williams, then a schoolteacher at The House of Refuge. Fortunately, for Anna, this sudden surge of notoriety eventually subsided. However, in years to follow, Anna would reappear in the limelight and her decision to model for Morgan would vex her for the rest of her life.

In 1891, Anna Williams accepted a $60/month offer as a teacher of kindergarten philosophy at the Girl’s Normal School. In spite of the unwanted publicity as “The Silver Dollar Girl”, Anna became an accomplished teacher in her own rite. Anna’s literary talents allowed her to publish numerous articles in current periodicals and win an award for the best original essay on psychology. Consequently, this talent called her to several cities where she gave lectures on the topic of kindergarten teaching. Later Anna became the supervisor of kindergartens in Philadelphia, a position she held for more than 25 years until her retirement. Anna rarely granted interviews, but when she did, she used her notoriety as Morgan’s “Goddess of Liberty” as an opportunity to talk about the issues with which she was passionate.

Anna returned to the limelight in 1892 when she found herself and a print of her bust the subject of an article in “The Ladies Home Journal”. In 1896, Anna announced her engagement to be married. That announcement in turn was reprinted in the May 1896 issue of the ANA journal, “The Numismatist”. For whatever reason, the engagement broke off and Anna never married. While there are several theories as to why this occurred, I believe the excessive publicity surrounding the engagement eventually doomed it.

The broken engagement represents a sad chapter in Anna’s life and her constant struggle for any sense of normalcy. This in turn is why I choose the 1896 Morgan Dollar to represent Miss Anna W. William’s story. Sometimes I wonder if every time Anna handled one of these coins, it served as a constant reminder to her. Fortunately, for her, Morgan Dollars in Philadelphia circulated about as much as dollar coins do today.

Always the schoolteacher, Anna even in retirement advocated for compulsory kindergarten education for all students in Philadelphia. Then on April 17, 1926, Anna Willis Williams died in her hometown of Philadelphia at the age of 68. Anna’s obituary also appeared in the May 1926 issue of “The Numismatist”.

Surprisingly, with very little evidence to the contrary, there is still some speculation as to the identity of Lady Liberty on the Morgan Dollar. A letter sent from Morgan’s daughter to her daughter is the primary reason for doubt. In that letter Morgan’s daughter states, “Father always said no matter how many models posed for him that he never bid any, and that he made up the obverse himself”. However, from Anna’s perspective, she is quoted describing her role as Lady Liberty as, “an incident of my youth”. I think regardless of what happened, Morgan was going to keep up his end of the anonymity bargain, and the model for the Morgan Dollar is indeed that of Anna W. Williams. I am also posting a photo collage of a print I purchased on ebid alongside the obverse of the 1896 Morgan Dollar from my collection. For me this is the primary piece of evidence to the identity controversy concerning the Morgan dollar, as the resemblance is unmistakable.
View Coin 1898-O United States $1 1898 O NGC MS 66
View Coin 1899-O United States $1 1899 O PCGS MS 65
View Coin 1900 United States $1 1900 PCGS MS 65
View Coin 1900-O United States $1 1900 O NGC MS 65
View Coin 1901-O United States $1 1901 O NGC MS 65
View Coin 1902-O United States $1 1902 O PCGS MS 65
View Coin 1904-O United States $1 1904 O PCGS MS 65
View Coin 1921 United States $1 1921 MORGAN NGC MS 65 There are certain things that strike me about this MS-65, 1921 Morgan Dollar; the first is that I have always associated the Morgan Dollar with the American West of the 1800’s. There in the American West the Morgan Dollar enjoyed wide acceptance and readily circulated. Then at the turn of the century, just as the sun was setting on Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show, it was setting on the currency of the West. In 1904, the US Mint suspended coinage of the Morgan Dollar due to low public demand and a shortage of silver. The second thing that strikes me is the political manipulation of the dollar as a whole. Except for the West, the dollar has never enjoyed broad public acceptance, mainly because of its heaviness and large size. Against the public need for dollars, powerful mining interests pushed for legislation to mint dollars giving the miners a market for their silver. The 1921 Morgan Dollar is a result of such legislation. The Pittman act of 1918 called for the United States to melt down large quantities of silver dollars from its vaults and sell the resulting bullion. The US Mint in turn used the proceeds from the bullion sale to purchase an equivalent amount of silver from American miners. With the newly purchased silver came a massive issue of Morgan Dollars from each of the three branch mints. The US Mint finally closed the curtain on the Morgan Dollar in 1921 with the release of the Peace Dollar later that year. Certainly, no one can say that the Morgan Dollar did not go without a bang. I sometimes wonder how many 1893-S dollars were lost due to the Pittman Act.

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