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Disme

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Half Disme Coins
The Half Disme of 1792: Introduction
As mentioned in the section on the Getz "Half Dollar" Pattern, in 1791 Robert Morris drafted legislation for a national coinage that provided for a presidential portrait on the coins.

 


1792 Half Disme History
1792 Half Disme Obverse and Reverse
Image Courtesy of Heritage Auction Galleries ...

Birch Half Disme 1792
Born of the idea that man's destiny was largely the result of his own effort and imagination, the United States of 1792 had grown to fourteen states with the addition, in 1791, of Vermont.

disme: early spelling of "Dime," pronunciation believed to be "Deem" (from the French).
DMPL: abbreviation for Deep Mirror Prooflike (used by PCGS).

disme
- a French term meaning one tenth. The US term for a tenth of a dollar, a dime, traces its roots back to this term. The term was americanized and the s was dropped.
doubloon ...

disme: Spelling of the word "dime" on U.S. 1792 pattern pieces and name given the 10-cent coin authorized in the Mint Act of April 2, 1792. Probably pronounced like "dime" with the "s" being silent.

Disme
The original spelling of dime, the s silent and thought to have been pronounced to rhyme with steam. (This variation was used in Mint documents until the 1830s and was officially changed by the Coinage Act of 1837.) ...

Disme - The original spelling of dime, 1/10 of a dollar.
Double Die - A term sometimes intended to mean a doubled die coin caused by machine doubling.
Doubled Die - A die with doubled details, letters and/or numerals during its minting.

Disme - In the Mint Act of 1792, this was the official name given to the federal coin denomination of ten-cents. It was later to be known as a dime.

Disme - One tenth of a dollar. An early spelling of the word "dime."
Double Eagle - A United States $20.00 gold coin.

disme
A frequently-used spelling of "dime" in the 17th century.
double denomination
An error in which a coin is restruck by the die pair of another denomination.

Disme - The original spelling of dime, 1/10 of a dollar.
Double Denomination - A rare error in which a previously struck coin is restruck by the die pair of another denomination.

disme
The early spelling of the word "dime," one tenth of a dollar.
Dmg ...

Disme
The original spelling of dime. It is thought to have been have been pronounced to rhyme with ream (the s being silent). This spelling was used in Mint documents until the 1830s and was officially changed by the Coinage Act of 1837.
DMPL ...

Disme: Original spelling of "dime" used into the 1830s in mint document.

half disme
The original spelling of half dime. The first United States regular issue was the 1792 half disme supposedly struck in John Harper's basement with the newly acquired Mint presses.
Half Dollar ...

The word "disme" never appeared on a regular-issue U.S. coin. But in 1792, before the start of official federal coinage, about 1, ...

The 1792 Half Dismes
Half dimes, called half dismes at the time, were first minted for circulation in 1792. In that year some 1,500 to 2,000 were produced. The Philadelphia Mint was not ready for commercial coin production.

Related Searches disme equal one century france dimes eighteenth century pronunciation
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However, the Mint Act was not passed by Congress until 1792, so the case for the half dismes of 1792 as the first regular issue is also valid.

The various pattern coins of 1792, produced in or out of the Mint facility were not issued for circulation, excepting the 1792 half disme, and this was not produced within the Mint building.

half dime, half disme A silver 5-cent coin of the United States. The Mint Act of April 2, 1792, authorizes "half dismes." See also disme. half eagle A gold $5 coin of the United States. See also eagle.

closely replicated the two reales (two-bits), and the disme (later to be called
a dime) representing 1/10 of a dollar.  As early as 1791, Thomas Jefferson
proposed the double disme or Twenty-cent coin in keeping with the decimal ...

It was not until 1792, however, that the first coins were struck at the new mint set up in Philadelphia These were the half disme (half dime) and possibly also the disme (dime) struck from silver plate supplied by George Washington himself.

obtained two of the rare silver half dismes, now valued at over $200,000 for our clients. Approximately 1,500 silver half-dismes (half-dimes) were minted in 1792, one year before the U.S. Mint was opened.

This silver five-cent coin was called a "half disme" (pronounced like "dime"), and was much smaller than today's nickel. Congress decided to have the United States Mint produce a new five-cent coin, made of nickel and copper, in 1866...

coin with a face value of 5 cents issued with dates between 1794 and 1873; originally called a half disme half eagle A U.S. gold coin with a face value of $5 first minted in 1795 and last minted in 1929 hobo nickel A coin (usually a U.S.

The name of the coin comes from the French disme (modern French spelling dîme), meaning "tithe" or "tenth part," from the Latin decima [pars]. The original spelling on U.S. coinage was "disme," but the "s" was dropped in the 1800s.

Two worn 1792 half dimes, or "disme" as it was originally spelled, also were sold at the convention for $14,950 and $69,000, respectively.
(via cnn.com)
Be on the Lookout for Lucky Pennies ...

The eagle on the reverse of the various Washington cents and half dollars is very similar to the eagle adopted for the reverse of our silver coins. Similarly, the designs of the half disme, disme, Birch cent, ...

United States of America
Cent; Dime; Disme; Dollar; Eagle; Half Dollar; Nickel; Quarter Dollar;
United States of America Colonies
Farthing; Pence; Real; Shilling; Six Pence; ...

2107 William F. Dunham: Quartette of William F. Dunham medals, 1919 and 1933, Mint State, two in brass, two in aluminum, variously denominated as ONE MILL (2 pieces), ONE DISME, and 1/10 CENT, in die combinations. (Total: 4 pieces).

Our dime is the 'tenth part' of a dollar, as our nation's coinage is based on the decimal system. Interestingly, provisions were made for the new U.S. Mint to strike the dime as far back as 1792, though at that time, it was referred to as the 'disme.

We took the Spanish piece of eight, that had been always the most popular coin among us, and gave it a new name: Dollar. Introducing the decimal monetary system we said: the tenth part of a dollar should be called disme (sic) and the one hundredth ...

See also: Coin, Half, Silver, Revers, Reverse

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