Jefferson Nickel

From Thomas Jefferson Encyclopedia

Front of original Jefferson nickel
Front of original Jefferson nickel

The Jefferson nickel has been in circulation since before World War II. In 1938, the United States Treasury elected to stop minting the Buffalo nickel. The Buffalo nickel (also known as the Indian Head nickel) had just completed its mandatory twenty-five year circulation, and since the new President, Franklin D. Roosevelt, was a Jefferson admirer, the U.S. mint announced a contest to design a coin in honor of the third President. The winning entry would receive a $1,000 prize. Normally, the Chief Sculptor-Engraver of the mint created American coins, but for the Jefferson five-cent piece, the general public was invited to submit designs and 390 contestants did so.

Reverse of original Jefferson nickel
Reverse of original Jefferson nickel

The winning artist, Felix Schlag, was a German immigrant who had been a citizen for only nine years. He spent four weeks on his version of the coin. In the letter that notified him of his success, Schlag, based on a Gilbert Stuart portrait he had encountered in an art book. On the reverse, he depicted Monticello. His version of the mansion underwent drastic revision before minting, but once released in 1938, Schlag's design has remained virtually unchanged for 66 years.

Though the images on the coin have undergone little change, there have been some variations in the metal content of the nickel. For most of its history, the Jefferson nickel has contained an alloy of 75% copper and 25% nickel. From 1942-1946, however, the war-time version of the coin circulated. Its metal content was 56% copper, 35% silver, and 9% manganese. This diverted the nickel normally used in currency to military uses. The striking of the 1838 Jefferson coin was not his first depiction on the country's currency. In 1869, his likeness had appeared on the two-dollar bill.[1]

Contents

2004 Nickel

First Reverse of 2004 nickel
First Reverse of 2004 nickel
Second reverse version of 2004 nickel
Second reverse version of 2004 nickel

For the first time, the reverse side of the nickel, the Monticello side, had changed to commemorate the Lewis and Clark Expedition. One minting had the Indian Peace Medal and the other had the keelboat from the expedition.




2005 Nickel

Front of 2005 nickel
Front of 2005 nickel
One design of reverse of 2005 nickel
One design of reverse of 2005 nickel
Second design of reverse of 2005 nickel
Second design of reverse of 2005 nickel

In 2005, the U.S. mint included a new image of Thomas Jefferson on the front to show a more modern look to the coin. The image was designed by Joe Fitzgerald. The mint also planned two reverse sides of the coin, a Westward Journey. The first was a buffalo, an animal that roamed the plains. The other side depicts the Pacific Ocean, a main goal of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. This series coin was created to again to commemorate Lewis and Clark.

2006 Nickel

In 2006, the nickel returned to using Felix Schlag's Monticello design on a newly cast reverse, while the obverse features a new forward-facing portrait of Jefferson, based on the 1800 Rembrandt Peale painting of Jefferson. It is the first U.S. circulating coin that features the image of a President facing forward. The new obverse was designed by Jamie Franki. It is more detailed than the 1938 image that encompasses modern technology.

Front of the 2006 nickel
Front of the 2006 nickel
Reverse of 2006 nickel
Reverse of 2006 nickel

Footnotes

  1. This section based on J. Boehm, Monticello Research Report, February 1998.