Buffalo Nickels
Designer – Engraver: James Earle Fraser
Metal Composition: 75% Copper – 25% Nickel
Diameter: 21.2 mm
Mass / Weight: 5 grams
Obverse: Head of a Native American Indian right. Legend: LIBERTY / 1913
Reverse: American bison left, motto (E PLURIBUS UNUM) above its back. Raised ground below. Legend: UNITED . STATES . OF . AMERICA / FIVE CENTS
The Buffalo nickel, sometimes known as the Indian Head nickel, was an American nickel five-cent piece minted from 1913 to 1938. It was designed by sculptor James Earle Fraser.
As part of a drive to beautify the coinage, five denominations of US coins had received new designs between 1907 and 1909. 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 unappeased 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 repeated 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 minimum 25–year period during which the design could not be replaced without congressional authorization had expired, the design was replaced by the Jefferson nickel designed by Felix Schlag.
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