5238

[L#5238] 1837 $5 NGC MS64

Currency:USD Category:Coins & Paper Money / US Coins Start Price:3,750.00 USD Estimated At:15,000.00 - 20,000.00 USD
[L#5238] 1837 $5 NGC MS64
Designed by William Kneass, this half eagle from 1837 is quite pleasing with splashes of almost peach-orange patina on each side. Both obverse and reverse are sharply struck and display good luster. The usual slight abrasions for the grade seem to mute the luster in the open space before Liberty, but around the stars, date and legend the luster flows with frosty perfection. Heavy coinage in 1834-6 began to trail off slightly in 1837 and 1838 after vast numbers of earlier heavy weight gold coins (mainly half eagles) returned to the mint for recoinage into the modified "Classic Head" type of 1834-38.

According to an 1883 "American Journal of Numismatics" commentary by Patterson DuBois, a mint employee, "WILLIAM KNEASS, second of the line, was born in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, September 1781, and was appointed engraver, January 29, 1824. Mr. Kneass had been chiefly a plate engraver for bookwork. There were some changes in the coinage during his term, notably in 1834 and 1838 for gold, and 1836, 1837, 1838, and 1840 for silver. But some of this work was done by Gobrecht as assistant. Kneass appears upon a pattern half dollar of 1838; but the silver dollar of 1836 as well as a pattern half of 1838 were the work of his assistant. Mr. Kneass is well remembered as an affable, genial 'gentleman of the old-school', who had the rare quality of engaging and winning the esteem and affection of children and youth, in whose companionship he found rich delight. Prior to his appointment he had an engraving office on Fourth above Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, which was a well-known rendezvous for the leading wits and men of culture, for which Philadelphia was then eminent. Mr. Kneass died in office, August 27, 1840. A good engraving of him hangs in the Assayer's Office, inscribed 'to his friend Adam Eckfeldt, Chief Coiner,' who had been chiefly instrumental in securing his appointment.."