Designer

Abraham Wolfe Davidson

The immigrant sculptor who designed one American coin — and never signed it.

He fled famine and persecution in Russia, carved his way into an education at Clemson, and got one shot at a US coin. The design committee fought to keep him; the federal art board nearly fired him. His half dollar exists — but his initials don't.

Who he was

Abraham Wolfe Davidson was born in 1903 in Vitebsk, in the Russian Empire's Pale of Settlement — the region (now in Belarus) where Jews were legally confined under the Tsars. He grew up amid rising persecution and the chaos of war, revolution, and famine. In 1922, a brother smuggled Davidson and his mother out of the country to join family already settled in Greenville, South Carolina.

He arrived with a talent already taking shape. He had studied at the Vitebsk art school as a teenager, and in the mid-1920s he studied sculpture in New York — by most accounts at the Beaux-Arts Institute of Design, the city's leading academy for architectural sculptors. He nearly didn't survive the decade: he fell seriously ill from the delayed effects of the famine he'd lived through back home.

What he wanted was a Southern education and a life as an artist. In 1934 he struck an unusual bargain with Clemson College in upstate South Carolina: he would sculpt a statue of the school's founder, Thomas Green Clemson, in exchange for room, board, and tuition. He enrolled as a special student, finished the statue in 1936 — it still stands in front of Tillman Hall — and in doing so made himself, in the words of one account, "Columbia's and Clemson's talented, adopted son." That standing is exactly what would save his coin.

The craft — and the one coin

Davidson was a sculptor, painter, and teacher far more than a coin man. He spent the heart of his career — roughly two decades from 1948 — running the art department at Brenau College in Gainesville, Georgia, and kept growing as an artist even late in life: in 1953 he studied at Black Mountain College in North Carolina under the ceramicist Peter Voulkos. His busts and statues live mostly in collections across South Carolina and Georgia. The Columbia half dollar is the only US coin he ever designed.

He got the job in 1936 because he was local and admired. South Carolina was marking 150 years since Columbia became the state capital, and the Sesquicentennial Commission picked the 32-year-old sculptor down the road at Clemson. Then came the gauntlet every commemorative had to run: the federal Commission of Fine Arts — the board that signed off on US coin designs — reviewed his plaster models and rejected them. They called the work "unsatisfactory" and said it "lacked artistic merit," and recommended replacing him with a more experienced medallist.

The committee refused to drop their man. The compromise that followed is the heart of his coin's story. Davidson reworked his models under the eye of Lee Lawrie — a sculptor-member of the Fine Arts Commission, and one of the most accomplished architectural sculptors in America. Under Lawrie's guidance the figure of Justice was made less "slumpy" and the palmetto leaves idealized. The revised models were approved on July 22, 1936. The design that reached pockets was his — pushed across the line by a master's hand.

The obverse — the heads side — shows Lady Justice with sword and scales, framed by Columbia's old and new state houses. The reverse — the tails side — carries a palmetto tree ringed by thirteen stars, with bound arrows at its base and a broken oak branch below, a nod to the British naval defeat at Fort Moultrie in 1776. One detail tells you everything about how the project went: Davidson's initials never appear on the coin.

Key facts

Born
1903, Vitebsk, Russian Empire (now Belarus)
Died
1981, Gainesville, Georgia, USA
Nationality
Russian-born American (immigrated 1922)
Known for
Sculptor, painter, and art teacher; the Thomas Green Clemson statue at Clemson University
US coin designed
1936 Columbia, SC Sesquicentennial half dollar (his only one)
Coin design note
Models revised under Lee Lawrie; Davidson's initials do not appear on the coin
Teaching
Art department, Brenau College, Gainesville, GA (c. 1948–1966)

Questions collectors ask

Who designed the 1936 Columbia, South Carolina Sesquicentennial half dollar?

Abraham Wolfe Davidson — usually credited as A. Wolfe Davidson — a 32-year-old sculptor connected to Clemson College. The South Carolina Sesquicentennial Commission chose him, and he designed both sides of the coin.

Are A. Wolfe Davidson's initials on the Columbia half dollar?

No. Unlike many US coins, this one carries no designer's initials. Davidson designed both the obverse and reverse, but his mark was never added — a quiet footnote to a design that the federal Commission of Fine Arts had nearly rejected.

Why did the Commission of Fine Arts almost reject Davidson's design?

The Commission reviewed his plaster models in 1936 and judged them 'unsatisfactory' and lacking 'artistic merit,' even suggesting a more experienced medallist take over. South Carolina's committee refused. Davidson instead reworked the models under sculptor Lee Lawrie, and the revised design was approved on July 22, 1936.

What else is Abraham Wolfe Davidson known for?

Far more than the coin. He was a working sculptor, painter, and longtime art teacher. His best-known work is the statue of Thomas Green Clemson in front of Tillman Hall at Clemson University, which he made in exchange for his education there in the 1930s and recast in bronze in 1966.

Sources