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1783 Nova Constellatio Copper - Crosby 2-B, R-2

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 Posted 03/20/2023  2:47 pm Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add numismatic student to your friends list Get a Link to this Message
Was fortunate to be able to acquire this item from the Sydney F. Martin Sale. Martin passed away in early 2021, had been a past President of the ANS and published several references for the Colonial Coin Collectors Club (C4). This coin is easy to look up, so as usual, post your thoughts on the grade before you see the holdered grade. Thoughts? Thanks!




Ex Ryder-Boyd-Ford

1783 Nova Constellatio Copper. Crosby 2-B, W-1865. Rarity-2. CONSTELLATIO, Pointed Rays, Small U.S.

136.4 grains. Glossy medium brown with traces of frosty luster. Both sides show excellent visual appeal and bold detail. A little area of discoloration is seen in the area between the wreath and the left side of the date, and some old encrustation remains among the leaves.

Provenance: From the Sydney F. Martin Collection. Earlier from Lyman Low's sale of January 1908, lot 283; Hillyer Ryder to F.C.C. Boyd; F.C.C. Boyd estate to John J. Ford, Jr.; our (Stack's) sale of the Ford Collection, Part V, October 2004, lot 35.

From the University of Notre Dame's Coin Library:
THE AMERICAN COINS OF 1783
Constellatio Nova Coppers: Introduction


In 1783 Robert Morris, who was the Superintendent of Finance during the Confederation, hired the British engraver Benjamin Dudley to design a set of coins for national use. Silver patterns denominated as 1000, 500 and 100 "units" as well as a copper 5 "units" pattern were produced (possibly also an 8 "unit" copper) but were never put into production. As patterns, these items were produced in very limited numbers as examples of what the final coins would look like. The obverse of the pattern coins display rays emanating from an Eye of Providence (as it was known by contemporaries) surrounded by a circular constellation of thirteen stars, as had been used on the $40 Continental Currency bills from the emission of April 11, 1778. The legend on the patterns was in Latin, NOVA CONSTELLATIO (A New Constellation). The reverse of each pattern display a wreath around the initials U.S. with the denomination below, outside the wreath is the legend, LIBERTAS JUSTITIA (Liberty Justice) and the date 1783. For additional details see the section on the NOVA CONSTELLATIO patterns of 1783. The design found on these patterns was the model for the private copper issues bearing the dates 1783, 1785 and a very rare variety dated 1786.

Unfortunately there is little documentary evidence on the private coppers that were based on the Morris pattern, and the few contemporary references that do exist are not in agreement. Even the word order in the name of the coin has been debated, NOVA CONSTELLATIO or CONSTELLATIO NOVA. In a single news item picked up by three different London newspapers during the week of March 11-14, 1786 the coin was said to have been inscribed CONSTELLATIO NOVA. The article also stated the coin was produced by the American Congress; but that information was retracted on March 16th. Apparently, the journalist was confused about the Confederation patterns, produced by Morris in 1783 and the private issue coppers on which he was reporting. Also, the Reverend William Bently of Salem, Massachusetts described the copper coin in his diary entry for September 26, 1787 using the word order CONSTELLATIO NOVA. In 1974 Walter Breen suggested the CONSTELLATIO NOVA word order as the correct form since it was better Ciceronian Latin and was found in contemporary sources. Based on his suggestions most authors adopted that word order.

More recently Eric Newman has shown the Confederation patterns were referred to as NOVA CONSTELLATIO coins in contemporary sources, such as Samuel Curwen's diary entry for May 15, 1784 where he uses that word order to describe the unique 5 unit copper pattern which was given to him. The word order on the Morris patterns themselves, especially the 500 unit piece, clearly shows NOVA CONSTELLATIO is the correct order. Newman also discovered contemporary references concerning the private copper issues, as the discussion by W. B. inThe Gentleman's Magazine of October 1786, which used the NOVA CONSTELLATIO word order (on p. 868 and plate 2, between pp. 824 and 825, figure 9).

Although NOVA CONSTELLATIO is surely correct for the patterns, the word order on the private coppers is ambiguous. The word CONSTELLATIO is in the position usually taken to be the top of the coin (based on the location of the eyebrow on the central eye) while NOVA is near the bottom. However, in the illustration to the article in the Gentleman's Magazine mentioned above, the obverse of the copper (1785 variety) is displayed in what would be called an upside down position (i.e. with NOVA on top) (click here for the illustration). This mistaken orientation may be the reason for the use of the word order "NOVA CONSTELLATIO" in the article. Interestingly, two years later (in December 1788) in an communication from T. W. Lee of Peckleton (on p. 1069) the magazine included an illustration of the 1783 variety as plate 2, figure 4, opposite p. 1069 (named only as a new American coin), this time with CONSTELLATIO on top, but showing that side of the coin as the reverse! (click here for the illustration). Clearly the ambiguity of the design caused confusion, even to contemporary numismatists.

Some varieties (most of the 1785 dated coins) have no punctuation, while others (primarily the 1783 coppers) have a stop between NOVA and CONSTELLATIO and a quatrefoil between CONSTELLATIO and NOVA. The word order depends on which mark one interprets as the starting point, the stop or the quatrefoil. On the 1783 dated coppers, the reverse side has a quatrefoil between the two words in the legend, using this logic for the obverse would give CONSTELLATIO NOVA as the word order. Currently, it appears NOVA CONSTELLATIO was the intended word order; certainly that was the order for the patterns on which the private coppers were based. However, on the private coppers coins the words are placed in such a way that the order is ambiguous. One wonders if the diemakers clearly knew what was being requested. In fact, based on the position of the eye design it appears CONSTELLATIO was at the top and therefore was usually read first, although this was clearly not the intention of Morris and Dudley. Apparently, contemporaries appear to have used both word orders and had difficulty in determining which end of the obverse was up! Furthermore, it appears contemporaries often did not describe the coin in relation to the obverse legend. An article in The New Haven Gazette for May 4, 1786 (also in The Massachusetts Centinel from Boston of May 10, The Connecticut Current of Hartford on May 15 and The Newport Mercury of May 29) described the coin as: "on one side an Eye of Providence, with thirteen stars; the reverse U.S. for United States." It seems there is no one answer as to a contemporary reading of the legend nor does there appear to be a single contemporary name for this copper.

Much of our information on the origins of this issue is derived from the correction to article originally published in various London newspapers between March 11-14, 1786. The correction was published in The Morning Chronicle and London Advertiser for March 16, 1786. In corrected the earlier article which had reported the coins were minted in America by the American Congress. The correction stated:

A correspondent observes, that the paragraph which has lately appeared in several papers, respecting a copper coinage in America is not true. The piece spoken of, bearing the inscription "Libertas et Justitia, & C" was not made in America, nor by direction of Congress. It was coined in Birmingham, by the order of a Merchant in New York, many tons were struck from this dye, and many from another; they are now in circulation in America, as counterfeit half pence are in England.

The author used the term "dye" to refer to a design rather than to a specific die. From existing examples we know there were two basic designs. One design has the date 1783; it appears in three obverse and three reverse die varieties found in three combinations. Two varieties (Crosby 1-A and 2-B) have obverses with pointed rays, while one variety (Crosby 3-C) has an obverse with blunt rays. The reverse of all three coins bear the date 1783, contain a quatrefoil between the words LIBERTAS and JUSTITIA and display the initials US in block letters. The other design has the date 1785 and is appears in five obverse and five reverse die varieties found in six combinations. In this group obverse 1 is the same blunt ray die used as obverse 3 in the 1783 series. Obverses 2-5 have pointed rays and contain no punctuation in the legend. All of the reverses (A-E) bear the date 1785, give the legend as LIBERTAS ET JUSTITIA and display the initials US in an ornate script.

The article clearly states the CONSTELLATIO NOVA (or NOVA CONSTELLATIO) coppers were produced as lightweight tokens. Mossman has discovered the first coppers produced in the series were made at an acceptable weight of 140 grains (this came close to the British halfpenny weight of about 150 grains); but as the series progressed the weight of the coppers was reduced to 127 grains and then 116 grains. However, as there were few coppers available in the new nation, these coins were readily accepted. According to the Joseph Felt's, An Historical Account of Massachusetts Currency, published in 1839, the predominant copper in Massachusetts in 1788 was the 1783 CONSTELLATIO NOVA.

The dating on these coins does not necessarily reflect the year of minting. Since the first news items about the coins do not appear until 1786, it seems unlikely any coppers had been minted in 1783! In fact, all early descriptions that have specific details which can be linked to a particular variety refer to the 1785 coppers. The first reference clearly referring specifically to the 1783 variety is an illustration to a note on a new American coin in the Gentleman's Magazine of December 1788. Indeed, Newman discovered some 1783 coppers were not introduced into circulation until about May of 1786. Apparently, the 1783 date was simply copied from the 1783 Morris pattern which had been used as the model for the coinage.

From available evidence it appears the 1783 coppers were put into circulation in America in 1785-1786. Mossman has surmised three varieties of the 1785 token were circulating by late 1786 or early 1787 and that the final three 1785 varieties were circulating before July of 1787. They appear to have circulated in several states but are most often associated by contemporaries with New York.

Gouverneur Morris has long been identified as the "Merchant in New York" who, according to the London newspaper, had commissioned the minting of the coppers. Gouverneur Morris, no relation to Superintendent of Finance Robert Morris, was a Philadelphia lawyer who had worked closely with Superintendent Morris and had actually authored the 1783 coinage proposal (for which the NOVA CONSTELLATIO patterns had been made) that went forward under the superintendent's name. Gouverneur Morris had been raised in New York City but he was not a merchant and did not reside in the city or the state of New York. This problem, of equating Gouverneur Morris as a New York merchant, was recently brought forward by Michael Hodder who went on to mistakenly suggest Dudley and Morris actually produced the coppers in Philadelphia. In fact, Eric Newman seems to have solved the puzzle. Apparently, the merchant who had the coppers produced was William Constable, who operated a "House of Commerce" on Great Dock Street (now Pearl Street) in New York City. Newman has discovered an agreement of May 10, 1784 in which Robert Morris, Gouverneur Morris and William Constable, "through a mutual Confidence in each other, have entered into a joint Copartnership as Merchants, under the firm of William Constable & Company."

It appears after the NOVA CONSTELLATIO pattern was rejected by the American Congress, the two Morris's entered into a private partnership with Constable. They keenly understood the pressing need for small change in America and fully realized underweight coppers could be traded for more that it would cost to produce and import them. In fact, their coinage proposal was put forth as an attempt to stop the British counterfeiters who had been flooding the American economy with poor quality lightweight halfpence. It appears after the defeat of their proposal the two Morris's decided to become "silent" partners in the firm of William Constable & Company in order to use the coinage design they had created to produce lightweight coppers in England that could then be imported to America and distributed at a profit.

During the second half of the decade of the 1780's the Republic of Vermont, as well as the states of Connecticut, New Jersey and Massachusetts began producing coppers, which were heavier than other circulating coppers. As these heavier coppers became more plentiful, lightweight coppers as the CONSTELLATIO NOVA tokens (especially the 1785 varieties) were taken out of circulation. In New York, where they were probably most abundant, their circulation was restricted by law starting as of August 1, 1787. As these coins were soon to loose their value many individuals sold them at a discount. Some mints purchsed these highly discounted CONSTELLATIO NOVA tokens in order to use them as a cheap source of finished planchets, illegally restriking them as New Jersey, Vermont, or Connecticut coppers; as occurred at the Elizabethtown Mint in New Jersey, Rupert's Mint in Vermont, and Thomas Machin's Newberg, New York facility.

Fifteen examples of these coppers have been discovered bearing the date 1786 (with US in roman letters), which, according to Newman, may represent a counterfeit die or possibly could have been produced by a less skillfull diemaker in anticipation of a further order from America. Additionally, there is a very crudly produced 1785 copper, with the legend clearly being "NOVA CONSTELLATIO" with only twelve rays and twelve stars and a reverse with US in script. This item is generally considered to be an American made counterfeit.

The CONSTELLATIO NOVA tokens were plentiful in America in the years just preceeding the first large scale copper coinage production. By the second half of the decade several mints had opened in the states and in Vermont and several Birmingham firms were producing tokens specifically for American clients. As a successful early condender the NOVA token has an influence on or been affiliated with several other early American coppers. Sometime during the second half of 1785 William Coley of New York designed the first Vermont landscape coppers adapting the Eye of Providence design with the blunt ray from a Nova copper he had seen in circulation (and in 1786 using the Nova pointed ray design). An even closer relationship exists with the British made IMMUNE COLUMBIA coppers, where three of the CONSTELLATIO NOVA dies (1783 Crosby obverse dies 2 and 3 and from 1785, obverse die 3) were combined with the two known IMMUNE COLUMBIA reverse dies to produce this privately made issue for circulation in American. Further, Mike Ringo has discovered some of the letter and number punches used on the 1783 Nova die 1-A (which is the die thought to be by a different diemaker) were also used on the 1783 dated GEORGIVS TRIUMPHO copper.

References

See: Eric P. Newman, "New Thoughts on the Nova Constellatio Private Copper Coinage" in Coinage of the Confederation Period, ed. by Philip L. Mossman, Coinage of the Americas Conference, Proceedings No. 11, held at the American Numismatic Society, October 28, 1995, New York: American Numismatic Society, 1996, pp. 79-105; Michael J. Hodder, "More on Benjamin Dudley, Public Copper, Constellatio Nova's and Fugio Cents" The Colonial Newsletter 34 (June, 1994, serial no. 97), 1442-50; Mossman, pp. 193-196 and Breen, pp. 117-119, also Walter Breen, "CONSTELLATIO NOVA" The Colonial Newsletter vol. 13, no. 3 (September, 1974) serial no. 41, pp. 453-455; Tony Carlotto, "1786 Nova Constellatio Census," The C4 Newsletter, A quarterly publication of the Colonial Coin Collectors Club, vol. 6, no. 3 (Fall, 1998) 43-46.
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Edited by numismatic student
03/20/2023 3:22 pm
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 Posted 03/20/2023  2:59 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add numismatic student to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
SPOILER ALERT - After you give your thoughts, you can find the grade in this link. Apparently this coin is the plate coin for this variety on PCGS confacts even if it isn't the highest graded coin of the variety.

https://www.PCGS.com/coinfacts/coin...-us-bn/45400
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 Posted 03/20/2023  3:10 pm  Show Profile   Check BH1964's eBay Listings Bookmark this reply Add BH1964 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
That was a very recent sale. The slab is well done. The coin looks strong for its grade.
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 Posted 03/20/2023  3:23 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add numismatic student to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Yes, it was earlier today. Some really rare early coppers, a silver immune columbia and a gold coin countermarked by Ephraim Brasher went on sale.

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Edited by numismatic student
03/20/2023 3:25 pm
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 Posted 03/20/2023  3:34 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add psuman08 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Wow impressive. I would guess this is Unc but not sure at what level. Another impressive piece for your collection!
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 Posted 03/20/2023  4:21 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add IndianGoldEagle to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
An amazing coin.
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 Posted 03/20/2023  6:01 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add paralyse to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
63BN

Certainly one of the nicest I've seen for the variety, with impeccable provenance
The little area of discoloration does not bother me in the slightest
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 Posted 03/21/2023  05:18 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add nickelsearcher to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Absolutely spectacular example. Another numismatic treasure for your amazing collection.
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 Posted 03/21/2023  09:42 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add panzaldi to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I'm not going to look at the plates which make assessing this a little challenging as most folks, including me, rarely if ever have a chance to grade one.

the eye is so well defined which I dont think is that common as it is so deep in the die. red peaking through on both sides makes for great eye appeal. a little discoloration at K7 reverse but its not in a key area and doesn't detract for me. everything about this coin screams MS

i think it could go as high as MS63 but I'm going with MS62 as the red is a little subdued. the surfaces are a little dull so its original patina is missing. the eye could be more defined so the strike could be a tad better on both sides and the discoloration on the reverse.

the coin would be a center piece for any colonial collection. congratulations on your acquisition.
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 Posted 03/21/2023  10:22 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add numismatic student to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Thank you for all of your kind words. I'm gonna sound like a broken record but in my view, this is not a colonial coin. At the time this coin was produced we had won the Revolutionary War for independence and a new nation had been created by our founding fathers. Morris and Rittenhouse with Hamilton and Jefferson were in the process of creating a new system of coinage for a newly born nation, the United States of America. For that purpose, a set of Nova Constellatio patterns was produced and was the first proposed coinage for the U.S.. Congress ultimately rejected these designs, opting for Jefferson's proposal to create dollars and cents also under the decimal system he had been exposed to as ambassador to Paris. This coin was a private issue of Robert Morris, one of our founding fathers. As Congress declined to make it official coinage, it is not really official money, but with the ingenuity of our forefathers, nothing was wasted and it was repurposed into state coinage and used in commerce as a token which still had value because of its copper content and scarcity of small change at that time.

The colonies were a relic of a time when we were subjects of King George III. This coinage represented our repudiation of British colonial rule and the birth of a self-governing new nation.

I believe that these coins were the first to bear the inscription of "US" predating the fugios of 1787 and that was the main reason I wanted it in my collection.
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Edited by numismatic student
03/21/2023 10:24 am
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 Posted 03/21/2023  11:17 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add panzaldi to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
but in my view, this is not a colonial coin


i hear what you are saying and why. PCGS categorizes it as colonial. how would you categorize then or does it even fall into any category of coinage? maybe as an SP since it actually never made it to production and is more of a pattern coin?
Edited by panzaldi
03/21/2023 11:18 am
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 Posted 03/21/2023  11:36 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add numismatic student to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I think this is the 1st US private issue coinage (sponsored by Robert Morris, the guy who financed the U.S. Revolutionary War and first Director of Finance of our Nation) which tried to become official coinage but failed in Congress. The patterns are the very rare 100 Unit, 500 unit, 100 Unit silvers and the 5 Unit copper. This coin is part of the business strikes made later from those pattern designs.
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Edited by numismatic student
03/21/2023 11:37 am
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 Posted 03/21/2023  11:39 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add panzaldi to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
thanks NS for the details on this coin. this is the reason for this forum
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 Posted 03/21/2023  11:50 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add numismatic student to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Thank you panzaldi. It is weird that the Revolution was fought between 1775-1783 and the people in our country were deemed traitors to the British Crown. Then how does Morris go to British engraver Benjamin Dudley and ask him to engrave the Nova Constellatio pattern coins? Morris also contracts with the Birmingham minting companies and has the coppers produced. Wouldn't helping Americans produce the new coinage also be treason to the British crown. It is unclear to me how all that happened. Wouldn't all this activity constitute aiding and abetting the American rebels and traitors who expelled the British out of its colonies? Some of this doesn't make a lot of sense but I guess it just gives me more to try to learn and understand.
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 Posted 03/21/2023  12:16 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add paralyse to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
In the world of Colonial (or pre-Federal, or whatever other term you'd like) coinage, speculation, rumors, hearsay, and guesswork are more prevalent than well-documented, properly cited and reviewed scholarly research. That being said, a great deal of work has been done over the last 30-40 years to try to improve both the quality and quantity of available references and sources, but as collectors, much of the research materials we rely on are twice that age, or more. The actual contemporary sources that survive are, of course, themselves at least 200 to 220 years old.

H.C. Miller's 'The State Coinage Of Connecticut' is 61 years old.

Ed Maris's 'A Historic Sketch of the Coins Of New Jersey..." is 142 years old.

Sylvester S. Crosby's series of articles regarding "Pre-Federal" issues are 126 years old.

Sydney Noe's references on the Massachusetts Pine Tree/Oak Tree and Half Cent/Cent are 74 and 70 years old, respectively.

Robert (Bob) Vlack's 'Early American Coins' is 58 years old. (although his reference on the billon coinage of the French colonies is only 19 years old!)

Eric P. Newman's got one of the most recent of the lot - his updated guide to Fugio cents (co-authored with Wayte Raymond) was released in 2008, but the source material dates from the 1950s.

Q. David Bowers 'Whitman Encyclopedia...' came out in 2009, and updated in 2019; but again, much of the source material is drawn from the research of the above authors and references.

Because of this, long-entrenched thinking - "that's the way things have always been done" - is hard to displace. So if several generations of collectors have grown up calling them all "Colonial" coins, that's likely to stay the case, even though it may not be semantically or historically accurate or even correct.

The furor regarding the reclassification of the Fugio cent over the last year or two is a good example of just how deep the traditions and arguments run within the world of numismatics and early copper in general.

That being said, the organization is the Colonial Coin Collectors' Club - CCCC (C4), not the Early American Coin Collectors' Club, or the Pre-Federal Issues Collectors' Club, or the State-Issued Currencies Coin Collectors' Club -- and they themselves refer to it as "Colonial-era" coinage.

There is still much room for improvement on both the quality and amount of research that can be done on the subject, and it's fascinating to think what new discoveries have yet to be revealed; new information still comes to light about our nation's earliest coinage issues even 200+ years later thanks to the tireless work of Bill Eckberg and many others like him, especially as the magic of the Internet has made digital scans of original source materials far more accessible than ever before, somewhat obviating the need to dig through musty, fragile 100-200+ year old books in search of obscure references.
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 Posted 03/21/2023  12:18 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add numismatic student to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
John Platek gives us a sense of what North America looked like in 1774 just before the Revolutionary War.



Our country looks like this after the Revolution. A lot happens in those intervening years.

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