Three-cent piece (United States coin)
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Three Cent Silver (United States) | |
Value: | 0.03 US dollars |
Mass: | (1851-53) 0.8g (1854-73) 0.75g |
Diameter: | 14 mm |
Thickness: | 1.55 mm |
Edge: | plain |
Composition: | (1851-53) 75% Ag,25% Cu (1854-73) 90% Ag,10% Cu |
Obverse | |
Design: | Shield on six sided star |
Designer: | James Barton Longacre |
Design Date: | 1851 |
Reverse | |
Design: | Roman numeral III |
Designer: | James Barton Longacre |
Design Date: | 1851 |
Three Cent Nickel (United States) | |
Value: | 0.03 US dollars |
Mass: | 1.94 g |
Diameter: | 17.9 mm |
Thickness: | mm |
Edge: | plain |
Composition: | 75% Cu, 25% Ni |
Obverse | |
Design: | Liberty Head |
Designer: | James Barton Longacre |
Design Date: | 1865 |
Reverse | |
Design: | Roman numeral III |
Designer: | James Barton Longacre |
Design Date: | 1865 |
The United States three cent piece was a unit of currency equaling 3/100th of a United States dollar. The mint produced two different three cent coins: the three cent silver and the three cent nickel.
[edit] History
The three cent coin has an unusual history. It was proposed in 1851 both as a result of the decrease in postage rates from five cents to three and to answer the need for a small denomination, easy to handle coin. The three cent silver featured a shield on a six sided star on the obverse and the Roman numeral III on the reverse. The coin was composed of 75% silver and 25% copper to ensure that the coin would be considered real currency yet not worth melting down for the silver. The coins were physically the lightest weight coins ever minted by the United States, weighing only 4/5 of a gram and with a diameter smaller than a modern dime and only slightly greater than the smallest gold dollars. The silver coins were known as "fishscales". The term "trimes" is often used today for these coins but that was first used by the director of the United States Mint (James Ross Snowden) at the time of their production. Starting in 1854, the three cent silver had its silver metal content raised to 90% in order to encourage circulation. The coin went through a design change at the time (three lines to border the star). A final design change occurred in 1859 due to striking problems, the number of lines bordering the star was reduced to two. The three cent silver coin was minted from 1851 to 1873 at the Philadelphia mint. In 1851 only, the New Orleans mint also struck some of the silver three cent coins. The 1873 issue was in proof state only. The silver three cent piece (along with the silver dollar, the half dime, and the two cent piece) was discontinued by the Coinage Act of 1873.
Civil War era silver shortages led to widespread hoarding of all silver coins, and most one and five cent coins as well. Various alternatives were tried, including encapsulated postage and privately issued coinage. The Treasury eventually settled on issuing fractional currency. These small denomination (1 to 50 cent) notes were never popular, as they were easy to lose and unwieldy in large amounts. The answer to this issue was reached in 1865 with the introduction of the three cent nickel coin. This coin was composed of copper and nickel and was larger than the silver coin of the same denomination. The coin featured a Liberty head obverse and another Roman numeral 'III' reverse. The three cent nickel was never intended as a permanent issue, only as stop gap measure until the wartime hoarding ceased. However, production of the coin continued until 1889, 16 years after the three cent silver was discontinued.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- US Three Cent Piece by year and type. Histories, photos, and more.
- Three Cent Pictures
Obsolete United States currency and coinage |
Topics: United States coinage | United States dollar | History of the United States dollar | Large denominations of currency |
Currency: Compound Interest Treasury Note | Demand Note | Federal Reserve Bank Note | Gold Certificate | Interest Bearing Note | National Bank Note | National Gold Bank Note | Refunding Certificate | Silver Certificate | Treasury or 'Coin' Note | United States Note |
Coins: Half cent | Large cent | Two-cent piece | Three-cent piece | Twenty-cent piece | Trade Dollar |
Gold Coins: Gold dollar | Quarter Eagle ($2.50) | Three-dollar piece | Half Eagle ($5) | Eagle ($10) | Double Eagle ($20) |