As the Civil War continued, the cost of the war loomed large. Any
precious metals available in the South often made their way to Europe to procure war goods, but the CSA did manage to mint a few coins. In 1861, Robert Lovett Jr. of
Philadelphia was commissioned to design, engrave, and make a one cent piece for the Confederacy. On the obverse (front), he used the head of
Minerva (French Liberty Head), which he had used on several store cards. The coins were struck using the then Federal standard of
cupronickel for cent pieces. He made a few samples, of which only 12 had been said to exist by the popular stories but research has shown that 14 are currently known to exist. Fearing prosecution for aiding the enemy, he stopped his work and hid the coins and
dies in his cellar. The original dies were purchased later and used to make restrikes, first by John W. Haseltine and later by Robert S. Bashlow. The dies were donated to the
Smithsonian Institution by Bashlow in 1962. In the aftermath of secession, the Confederacy seized
U.S. Mint facilities at
Charlotte, North Carolina,
Dahlonega, Georgia, and
New Orleans, Louisiana. After seizing and appropriating the bullion reserves stored at the facilities, the Confederate Treasury, led by C. G. Memminger, determined that the cost of minting coins far outweighed the benefits. Circulating
specie would be virtually nonexistent in the Confederacy throughout the entirety of the war. A wide variety of local token and scrip would attempt to fill this void, to little avail. In late April 1861, four Confederate
half dollars were struck on a hand press by employees of the New Orleans Mint. Because of the high relief of the
coin die, a test striking was made to determine if coins would release from the Confederate die. The die was made by a
printing plate engraver (A.H.M. Peterson) in
New Orleans who was unfamiliar with techniques required to engrave coining dies. These coins were struck using a U.S. obverse die (
Seated Liberty) and the Confederate die made by Peterson. These coins are known as
originals, and the location of all four of the coins is known today. As the result of an 1879 article about the Confederate cent printed in a
New York City newspaper, Benjamin F. Taylor, M.D. (Chief Coiner, New Orleans Mint, CSA) contacted coin dealer Ebenezer Mason. Taylor informed Mason of the existence of the Confederate half dollar and the die. Mason bought the die and coin from Taylor and sold them to J.W. Scott Co. of New York City, a coin and stamp dealer. Scott bought 500 1861
United States half dollars from a New York bank that were supposedly struck at the New Orleans Mint. Scott had the reverse of the half dollars planed down and performed a one-sided strike using the Confederate half dollar die. The Seated Liberty obverse of the coins were flattened some because of the one-sided strike. In addition, Scott struck 500 half dollar-sized tokens in
white metal using the Confederate die and a newly made die to commemorate the restrikes of the Confederate half dollars. The Confederate half dollar die went missing during the 1920s and has not been seen since. Popular stories claim one of the Confederate half dollars was given to Confederate President
Jefferson Davis. This story has no basis in fact. In an 1879 letter to Ebenezer Mason, Davis confirmed that a
Union soldier (actually a Federal Officer) stole a coin from one of his wife's trunks, but could not confirm that it was like the then known Confederate half dollar. It is possible that the coin was a
gold so-called Jefferson Davis
dime struck at the Paris (France) Mint, which Davis described to coin dealer Ed Frossard in an 1880 letter. All known Jefferson Davis dimes were struck in
silver at the
Paris Mint. The Davis letter is the only known reference to a gold specimen, which was likely a special presentation piece made for Davis. ==Banknotes==