Who he was
In the fall of 1792, the United States was a country without a coin to its name. It had a Constitution, a President, and a brand-new law ordering a national mint — but no federal money in anyone's pocket. The man hired to fix that was not a sculptor or an engraver. He was a clockmaker.
Henry Voigt was born in 1738 into a Pennsylvania family of German heritage — contemporaries called him "a plain Dutchman," using the old word for Deutsch. He grew up fixing watches and building mathematical instruments, the kind of precise, fiddly work that teaches a person to make metal do exactly what they want. As a young man he had even worked in a mint in Germany, where, by his own later account, he introduced improvements to the machinery.
Back in America, Voigt's reputation was for fixing impossible problems. He repaired clocks and watches for Thomas Jefferson. He spent years helping the inventor John Fitch build one of the first working steamboats — a vessel that in 1790 carried passengers along the Delaware at six to eight miles an hour, years before Robert Fulton got the credit. Fitch said of him: "He is a man most ready of mechanical improvements of any on earth, and I am persuaded that I never could have completed the steamboat without him."
That was the man George Washington's government needed. The Coinage Act of April 2, 1792 created the Mint and put the scientist David Rittenhouse — an old acquaintance of Voigt's — in charge as its first director. Rittenhouse needed someone who could build coining presses, cut dies, and turn raw metal into struck money. Voigt got the job. He became the first Chief Coiner of the United States Mint, and for a stretch its first superintendent too, and he held the post until he died in 1814.