1908 $10 Indian Head Eagle, with Motto PCGS MS62
Here's a great type coin at an affordable price. Plus it is the first year that this issue carried the motto IN GOD WE TRUST. President Theodore Roosevelt believed it was immoral to place the name of God on our nation's coinage. However, Congress did not agree and the latter part of 1908 saw the motto placed on both $10 eagles and $20 double eagles. PCGS graded 2,047 as MS62 with 1,788 finer.
The $10 Indian Head eagle was the first coin struck by the U.S. Mint employing the Janvier lathe, a new reducing machine Saint-Gaudens recommended that would replicate the quality of numismatic art being produced in France at the time. Supported by President Theodore Roosevelt's deeply personal foray in U.S. coinage, in 1905 Saint-Gaudens was given the creative challenge of developing three new circulating coins. Among them was the $10 Eagle coin. Roosevelt was smitten with the artistic elements of the coins of ancient Greece. After returning to his studio in Cornish, NH, Saint-Gaudens set to work preparing sketches of the design of the new Eagle coin. The artist focused on crafting the image of a standing eagle, one of which found its way onto the 1905 presidential inaugural medal. An adaptation of that design became the reverse device of the $10 Indian head Eagle.
The Janvier lathe, a new reducing machine that Saint-Gaudens recommended that would replicate the quality of numismatic art being produced in France at the time. It was still being used at the U.S. Mint as late as 2008.
Saint-Gaudens took inspiration from the classical figure of Nike (Victory) when he drafted initial designs for a cent piece that was not developed further. This profile of Nike, bedecked with an olive wreath, became the obverse motif for this Eagle coin. Roosevelt saw Saint-Gaudens' design for the eagle, and was not happy with it. He made his feelings known--and offered an artistic suggestion--in a letter to him dated November 14, 1905. Wrote Roosevelt, "...is it possible to make a Liberty with that Indian feather head-dress? ... Would the feather headdress be any more out of keeping with the rest of Liberty than the canonical Phyrgian cap which is never worn by any free people in the world?"
PCGS # | 8859 |
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Grading Service | NONE |
Year of Issue | NONE |
Grade | NONE |
Denom Type | N/A |
Numeric Denomination | $10 |
Mint Location | NONE |
Designation | NONE |
Circ/UnCirc | Not Specified |
Strike Type | N/A |
Holder Variety | Motto |
Grade Add On | NONE |
Holder Type | N/A |