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The E-Sylum: Volume 16, Number 46, November 10, 2013, Article 14

MOUNT RUSHMORE QUARTER LAUNCH CEREMONY

Last week we discussed the Mount Rushmore five-ounce silver coin being minted in conjunction with the 2013 Mount Rushmore quarter, Here's a report from the Rapid City Journal about the recent launch ceremony for the quarter. I enjoyed the design, which shows the monument being sculpted. In attendance at the ceremony was the last living person who worked to create the gigantic sculpture. -Editor

Rushmore quarter launch ceremony

The last time Nick Clifford drove to work on Mount Rushmore National Memorial in 1940, a quarter bought more than $4 in today's money.

Now a quarter can't buy a pack of gum in a Custer convenience store.

Never mind that. What's important with today's quarter is that Mount Rushmore is back on it.

And Clifford, the last living worker on the monument, celebrated the newest coin Wednesday morning at the National Guard Armory in Custer.

With the pomp of a graduation ceremony, officials from the U.S. Mint and Mount Rushmore stood before Custer and Hot Springs students and unveiled the new quarter. The children in attendance were each given a quarter after the ceremony, and members of the public were able to buy $10 rolls and commemorative sets.

The new coin is part of the mint's "America the Beautiful Quarters" program, which celebrates one national site in each state.

South Dakota is the last of five 2013 dated quarters to be unveiled this year, coming after Fort McHenry National Monument in Maryland, Great Basin National Park in Nevada, Perry's Victory and International Peace Memorial in Ohio and White Mountain National Forest in New Hampshire.

The Mount Rushmore quarter harkens back to the monument's construction, featuring scaffolding and a worker hanging from a harness underneath Thomas Jefferson.

"I really think it's kind of cool that they put the carvers in there," said Marsha Leininger, who bought a couple of $10 rolls after the ceremony.

Clifford, 92, worked on the memorial between 1938 and 1940. After the ceremony, he signed rolls of quarters bought by members of the public and posed with people for photos, including one with Rapid City Mayor Sam Kooiker.

The last time the four carved presidents graced a quarter was in 2006, when each state quarter featured a unique design for the reverse, or tails, side. That one featured a portrait shot of Mount Rushmore, along with grains of wheat and a Chinese ring-necked pheasant, which was imported here in 1898.

In 1991, two coins in a three-coin commemorative edition featured Mount Rushmore, according to Michael White, a spokesman for the U.S. Mint. That uncirculated edition featured the monument on a silver dollar and a half dollar. The third, a $5 gold coin, featured an eagle.

To read the complete article, see: The stone face of Mount Rushmore featured on the latest quarter (rapidcityjournal.com/news/local/the-stone-face-of-mount-rushmore
-featured-on-the-latest/article_7e555256-dda9-596f
-a719-5b253f3e5abd.html)

Quick Quiz Answers

Last week I noted that the Rushmore quarter is another in a very exclusive set of U.S. coins picturing the same president on BOTH sides of the coin. Is asked, "What are the others?" -Editor

Phil Iversen was the only reader to reply on this topic. He writes:

The Lincoln Memorial Cent and the South Dakota Statehood Quarter come to mind.

You guys can do better than that. Those two are correct, but there are more. For years the only one was the Lincoln Memorial Cent, with Lincoln's statue inside the Lincoln Memorial viewable on the reverse. The others I was thinking of include the New Jersey State Quarter (with Washington Crossing the Delaware on the reverse) and the 2009 Lincoln cents, two of which show Lincoln on the reverse. -Editor

2009-Lincoln-Cent-Design2

To read the earlier E-Sylum article, see: THE MOUNT RUSHMORE FIVE-OUNCE SILVER COIN (www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v16n45a12.html)

Stacks-Bowers E-Sylum ad 11-08-13.indd


Wayne Homren, Editor

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