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Click for larger image.
This device is the first "powered" coining press to be used
at the United States Mint in Philadelphia. Thonnelier invented
the press in France in 1833. It was operated by steam, while
earlier presses were operated by hand. Philadelphians Merrick,
Agnew, and Tyler imported the press in 1836. When it arrived
in Philadelphia, Franklin Peale of the U.S. Mint made improvements
to this model. The coining press was first operated on March
22, 1836.
Robert Maskell Patterson, the director of the Mint from 1835
to 1851, wrote the following report to President Andrew Jackson
in 1837:
"On the
23rd of March last (1836), the first steam coinage in America
was executed at this Mint; and the performance of the press,
in which the power of the lever is substituted for that of
the screw, has answered all our expectations. Since that time,
all the copper coins have been struck by this press, and it
has been lately used with success for coining half dollars.
The workmen are now engaged in making other steam presses;
and as these are completed, the coining by human labor be
abandoned, and the work that can be executed in...the Mint
will be greatly increased."

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and the image on the right.
There is some discrepancy about the date that appears on
some of the U.S. Mint coins. One token that was printed says,
"United States Mint, First Steam Coinage, Feb. 22, 1836."
According to Director Patterson's report, however, March 23
is the correct date. Perhaps some coins were printed in advance,
or February 22 was the date planned for the first printing.
It also may have be chosen to coincide with George Washington's
birthday, but delay or postponement ensued and the coining
press wasn't operated until March 23. The February 22 coins
were never recalled.
The press uses a "toggle joint," a special type of link mechanism
which yields great pressure, instead of the screw press. This
model could produce 100 coins a minute. David Gilbert remodeled
the coining press in 1858. The U.S. Mint removed it from service
in 1875 when George B. Soley purchased it as an "historic"
relic. (Soley was a die sinker and maintained a shop on Chestnut
Street in Philadelphia.) For the next thirty years, he exhibited
it for his own and the public's benefit, following the "fair
circuit" throughout the nation.

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and the image on the right.
In 1876, Soley displayed the press at the Centennial Exposition
and used it to strike the Centennial's medals. In 1883 it
appeared at the opening of the Brooklyn Bridge and the Southern
Exposition in Louisville. In 1893, Soley exhibited the coining
press at the Columbian Exposition in Chicago, then in Buffalo
for the Pan American Exposition in 190l, and St. Louis' Louisiana
Purchase Exposition in 1904. At these events, he struck small
13mm medalets usually with an official logo on one side and
the "Lords Prayer" on the other, which he sold for a quarter.
The Franklin Institute acquired the coining press in 1927
from Mrs. George B. Soley. It was then reconditioned and motorized.
The press moved to the site of the new Science Museum in 1933-34,
in order to strike aluminum tokens for visitors. A bust of
Benjamin Franklin appeared on the souvenir coin, with the
facade of The Franklin Institute on its reverse.

Click for a larger view of the image on the left
and the image on the right.
Content - The Franklin Institute
Online "Inquiry Attic" (Feb '00)
Note: The objects pictured above
are part of The Franklin Institute's protected collection
of objects. The images are © The Franklin Institute. All rights
are reserved.
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