Possible origin of recessed date on SL quarters - Update

The following letter was discovered yesterday in the archives. It offers a hint about who suggested recessing the date on Standing Liberty quarters beginning in 1925. The search continues for Mr. Franc’s original letter to Treasury Secretary Mellon.
January 23, 1924
Mr. Henry J. Franc, Jr.
401 7th St. N.W.
Washington, DC
Sir:
Your letter of January 21, 1924, addressed to the Secretary of the Treasury has been referred to this office, and your suggestion as to the date on the quarter noted.
Respectfully,
R.J. Grant
Director of the Mint
[NARA-CP RG 104, entry 235, vol. 461]
January 23, 1924
Mr. Henry J. Franc, Jr.
401 7th St. N.W.
Washington, DC
Sir:
Your letter of January 21, 1924, addressed to the Secretary of the Treasury has been referred to this office, and your suggestion as to the date on the quarter noted.
Respectfully,
R.J. Grant
Director of the Mint
[NARA-CP RG 104, entry 235, vol. 461]
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Comments
the task of researching archives has my pat on the back. Your eyes go buggy,
your butt gets sore and endless hours of nothing after nothing. Thanks for all
your hard work RWB
bob
would be interesring to discover something about Henry Frank from Washington DC
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
Had there been any mention of changing the date during the preceding years?
Thanks for posting the breaking news RWB.
"Inspiration exists, but it has to find you working" Pablo Picasso
Keeper of the VAM Catalog • Professional Coin Imaging • Prime Number Set • World Coins in Early America • British Trade Dollars • Variety Attribution
<< <i>Well, that died fast. >>
Hey, it was the last Sunday of meteorlogical Summer. I was out stimulating the economy by buying ice cream!!!!
TD
This could also be a dead end - maybe Mr. Franc suggested adding fig leaves to the dates......
In the 19th century it was common to repeat the substance of a letter when writing the reply. By the 1920s that was no longer done, and it is more difficult to reconstruct the exchange.
Very interesting, as always.
I wonder why the Mint continued to use the raised date on the Buffalo Nickel. Surely they would have learned from their SLQ mistakes. In terms of design and metallic content, the Buffalo date was more durable, but as we all know, it is often completely unreadable in the low circulated grades.
I wonder if we'll have the same problem with the Buffalo gold!
My Adolph A. Weinman signature

<< <i>RWB,
Very interesting, as always.
I wonder why the Mint continued to use the raised date on the Buffalo Nickel. Surely they would have learned from their SLQ mistakes. In terms of design and metallic content, the Buffalo date was more durable, but as we all know, it is often completely unreadable in the low circulated grades. >>
Quite seriously, because nobody complained about it, or suggested that they change it.
There is a letter by Charles Barber from 1913 that recommended against recessing the nickel’s date. This was considered about a month after the revised reverse was approved. If I remember correctly, Barber was concerned about raising the die metal to accommodate a recessed date would cause problems with striking. He also recommended against incuse digits on the coin (like the initial “F”) because the die’s raised metal was likely to break off and leave coins with damaged dates.
[Note that Morgan was the only engraver from Feb 1917- Jan. 4, 1925, except for a short period when John Sinnock was an assistant. Sinnock didn't start work until August 3, 1925.]
Quite seriously, because nobody complained about it, or suggested that they change it. >>
Guess it wasn't as high on their agenda like the bare breasts on the '16 and '17 issues...
<< <i>The quarter wasn’t on anyone's agenda until McNeil complained about his design being changed in Jan 1917. The "bare breast" story is pure nonsense - it never happened. >>
Really?
How about the wives of certain members of congress at that time who objected to the bare breast design? Wasn't this the real impetus for the deign change?
j.
<< <i>Well, that died fast. >>
Numismatic Research is a lonely and underappreciated skill.
<< <i>
How about the wives of certain members of congress at that time who objected to the bare breast design? Wasn't this the real impetus for the deign change?
>>
We need a citation on that - kinda like the one RWB gave above (record group, entry number & box number please).
Alternatively we'll settle for a contemporary article, like in the New York Times.
RWB's problem is that he can't prove such an article doesn't exist.
Your problem is that you can't prove it does.
Who has the burden of proof in such a case
<< <i>
<< <i>
How about the wives of certain members of congress at that time who objected to the bare breast design? Wasn't this the real impetus for the deign change?
>>
We need a citation on that - kinda like the one RWB gave above (record group, entry number & box number please).
Alternatively we'll settle for a contemporary article, like in the New York Times.
RWB's problem is that he can't prove such an article doesn't exist.
Your problem is that you can't prove it does.
Of course I can't prove it, I wasn't around
Jay Cline's book on Standing Quarters is the only ref I can give.
<< <i>RWB's problem is that he can't prove such an article doesn't exist.
Your problem is that you can't prove it does.
Who has the burden of proof in such a case
The Langbords?
Keeper of the VAM Catalog • Professional Coin Imaging • Prime Number Set • World Coins in Early America • British Trade Dollars • Variety Attribution
There is not one letter or article complaining about the SL “bare breast” that is contemporary with the coins. There is nothing in Congressional documents, either. Not one modern article referring to this non-issue includes any references from 1917. The story is simply an embellished fabrication. The same goes for the on-line garbage and other copycat junk.
The only controversy was about the eagle’s talons. This appeared in the New York Times, Time of London, Christian Science Monitor, etc. and if Mint Director Robert Woolley’s autobiography.
If you want to know the real story of the SL quarter, borrow a copy of “Renaissance of American Coinage 19161-1921.” There you will find quotation from hundreds of original document and complete references to their origin. You can literally take ther book to NARA or Library of Congress or Smithsonian Archives of American Art or dozens of other archives and read the originals yourself.
Mr. Cline’s book is excellent for SL quarter varieties and striking characteristics. The historical background is, however, useless.
<< <i>jhdfla:
There is not one letter or article complaining about the SL “bare breast” that is contemporary with the coins. There is nothing in Congressional documents, either. Not one modern article referring to this non-issue includes any references from 1917. The story is simply an embellished fabrication. The same goes for the on-line garbage and other copycat junk.
>>
RWB-
Any idea when/where the "bare breast" story originated?
Didn't wanna get me no trade
Never want to be like papa
Working for the boss every night and day
--"Happy", by the Rolling Stones (1972)
2. Date - That is a guess based on the letter quoted in the first post. Clearly, Mr. Franc referred to the date and made some sort of suggestion. Maybe his experience in business (he owned a clothing store in DC) brought him into contact with dateless quarters. Maybe he was a coin collector. Maybe he was just curious and offered a suggestion. If I can find his first letter to Sec. Mellon, we might know.
This is how a lot of research gets done. A clue suggests an answer which suggests a path. This clue indicates I need to check the “Letters Received-HQ” for 1924 and also “Letters Sent - Philadelphia” for late 1924 (when annual hub work was being done), also “Letters Sent – Sec of Treasury,” pplus some other archive files.
If the mint actually acted on Mr. Franc's suggestion, it would have been nice for them to have told him....but that's not how they did things back then. 'Course it might simply have been a coincidence.
Lance.
"An excellent idea for preserving the date on the new quarters was submitted my Mr. Franc of Washington, DC. (See attached letter.) The engraver is ordered to immediately implement this suggestion by recessing the digits of the date beginning with the 1925-dated quarters. The result will resemble the date on the half-dollar designed by Mr. Weinman in 1916."
“Do not mention this change to the press or Mr. Franc. Otherwise there will be criticism and we will be forced to recognize Mr. Franc in some way or give him samples. The mint service must not be embarrassed in having ignored this difficulty since 1916.”
[NO! The above is not real – It is my imagination of something I’d like to find…]
Garrow
TD
Yellowjacket - The date was discussed by Fraser and the mint director of engraver Barber in May 1913, not long after Fraser OK'd changing the reverse. Barber said not to make another change, because collectors would hoard the coins. That's where the matter ended, although each year's hubs had slight changes to the date area, and completely new master dies were introduced in 1916.
<< <i>Interesting thread, I completely missed it the first time around. >>
Ditto.
Coin Rarities Online
bob
CLASS OF 1888
FORTIETH ANNIVERSARY
December. 1928
NON-GRADUATES.
(This list is intended to include all men socially connected with the Class but who did not
receive a degree in College or Scientific School.)
HENRY FRANC, Jr.
Bom June 28, 1866, Washington, D. C.
Parents Henry Franc and Babette Rosenthal.
Married Lena Leucht, Newark, N. J., Feb. 23, 1892.
Children Miriam, March ??, 1893.
Ruth, Feb. 2, 1900.
Address 401 Seventh Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.
He was a member of the Class in freshman and sophomore
years. The present Class Secretary has succeeded in eliciting
from Franc two pleasant letters. Franc continues as a mer-
chant.