Quarter Sawn Oak Frame with 35 Historic Buffalo Nickel Coins [SOLD]
+ Add to my watchlist Forward to Friend
- Category: Arts and Crafts Style Accessories
- Origin: The Arts and Crafts Movement
- Medium: Oak frame, 35 historic U.S. nickel coins
- Size: 15-3/4” x 13-1/2” frame size
- Item # C3773VA SOLD
The Buffalo nickel or Indian Head nickel was a copper-nickel five-cent piece struck by the United States Mint from 1913 to 1938. It was designed by sculptor James Earle Fraser.
In 1911, Taft administration officials decided to replace Charles E. Barber's Liberty Head design for the nickel, and commissioned Fraser to do the work. They were impressed by Fraser's designs showing a Native American and an American bison. The designs were approved in 1912, but were delayed several months because of objections from the Hobbs Manufacturing Company, which made mechanisms to detect slugs in nickel-operated machines. The company was not satisfied by changes made in the coin by Fraser, and in February 1913, Treasury Secretary Franklin MacVeagh decided to issue the coins despite the objections.
Despite attempts by the Mint to adjust the design, the coins proved to strike indistinctly, and to be subject to wear—the dates were easily worn away in circulation. In 1938, after the expiration of the minimum 25-year period during which the design could not be replaced without congressional authorization, it was replaced by the Jefferson nickel, designed by Felix Schlag.
This handmade quarter-sawn oak frame was made to display this group of 35 Indian Head nickels. They date from 1921 to 1938.
Condition: Quarter Sawn Oak Frame with Historic Buffalo Nickel Coins - original condition
Provenance: from a private collection
Recommended Reading: CRAFTSMAN HOMES: Architecture and Furnishings of the American Arts and Crafts Movement by Gustav Stickley
- Category: Arts and Crafts Style Accessories
- Origin: The Arts and Crafts Movement
- Medium: Oak frame, 35 historic U.S. nickel coins
- Size: 15-3/4” x 13-1/2” frame size
- Item # C3773VA SOLD
Click on image to view larger.