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To: fieldmarshaldj

Agreed. The tradition of having Lady Liberty (or some variation of such) on coinage goes back to ancient Greece. Empires and kingdoms had rulers on their coins. Republics and democracies used a national symbol or Lady Liberty (France, Switzerland, etc).

It’s not coincidental that Lady Liberty started to vanish from our coinage around the same time that it liberty started to vanish from our country.


51 posted on 09/19/2023 7:38:24 PM PDT by In_Iowa_not_from
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To: In_Iowa_not_from

Or when the silver went off the coinage, in 1965.


54 posted on 09/19/2023 8:46:06 PM PDT by fieldmarshaldj (America Owes Anita Bryant An Enormous Apology)
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To: In_Iowa_not_from
It’s not coincidental that Lady Liberty started to vanish from our coinage around the same time that it liberty started to vanish from our country.

Perzackly

72 posted on 09/20/2023 9:47:16 AM PDT by null and void ( Fall Is Here: Pumpkin Spice-Scented Children Presented To Joe Biden)
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To: In_Iowa_not_from; null and void
It's a bit more complicated than that.

The 1909 Lincoln penny was supposed to be a one-year commemorative with the Indian Head returning in 1910. That's not how it played out.

One of the hallmarks of the Progressive Era was the belief in an all-powerful federal government with an all-powerful president, both freed from the constraints of the Constitution. That's why the Pledge of Allegiance became the Progressives' antidote to the Constitution.

The quarter fell in 1932 with Washington and the nickel in 1938 with Jefferson. FDR's body was barely cold when they put him on the dime.

Franklin on the half dollar was a bit of a change, but Kennedy's body was barely cold when they put him on the half. At least the half dollar died in 2004, with only proof Kennedy halves being minted.

That's why I liked the Sacajawea dollar coin, even though the manganese base was ugly when tarnished. It was a return to both Lady Liberty and Indians.

76 posted on 09/20/2023 10:07:49 AM PDT by Publius
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