• Metal
    Change
    Bid
    Ask
  • +24.08
    $3,997.36
    $4,006.06
  • +0.28
    $48.14
    $48.36
  • +11.89
    $1,539.17
    $1,570.30
  • +11.10
    $1,366.60
    $1,436.90
  • Rhodium
    $7,725.00
    $8,125.00
+800-735-1311

Standing Liberty Quarter 1929 Uncirculated

As low as: $269.00
Inventory
Out of stock
Product ID
24665
QtyWire/CheckBitcoinCC/Paypal
Any$269.00$271.69$279.76
Description
Details

The 1929 Standing Liberty Quarter has a mintage of 11 million and is most difficult to find in brilliant uncirculated condition. Being in the highly coveted brilliant uncirculated condition, the 1929 Standing Liberty Quarter has a pristine surface, free from scratches and abrasions.The Philadelphia Mint participated in the Standing Liberty Quarter production, producing some of the higher mintages of the series. Hermon Atkins MacNeil was the sculptor who designed the Standing Liberty. The US Mint Director, Robert Woolley, desired a big change from the Barber series design and MacNeil definitely delivered. The first design was more of a militaristic theme and was asked to be revised. MacNeil revised the first design, including dolphins to represent the famous oceans. In 1917, MacNeil came across a new design, without his approval, and started an uproar. He was then allowed to make the final revisions of Lady Liberty, which became the coin that was minted until 1930.

The Standing Liberty Quarter succeeds the Barber coinage and offers a new design aesthetic many people, including the president at the time, desired. Theodore Roosevelt wanted to get away from the boring and simplistic portraits of Lady Liberty and make US coinage a work of art again. Famous sculptor, Hermon Atkins MacNeil, was called upon by the mint's director to take on such a responsibility. The design MacNeil first introduced was very militaristic in detail and was rejected by the Commission of Fine Arts. MacNeil then added dolphins to represent the world's famous oceans, since this design had never been used before, and was accepted for a short time. The US Mint revised the quarter, again, and without MacNeil's permission, causing him to complain publicly about the disrespect. MacNeil was given the chance to revise the coin one more time, in 1917, and the design was used for the rest of the Standing Liberty Quarter's production.

Customer reviews