Designer

John Eckstein

The court sculptor who modeled America's Draped Bust Liberty — for thirty dollars.

In September 1795, the U.S. Mint paid a German sculptor thirty dollars to turn a famous painter's sketch into plaster. The face he shaped looked out from America's silver dollar for the next decade — and almost nobody remembers his name.

A thirty-dollar commission that outlived everyone

In the late summer of 1795, the young Philadelphia Mint had a problem. Its first silver dollars — the Flowing Hair design — were widely thought to be ugly. The Mint's new director wanted a fresh, dignified Liberty, and he wanted her fast.

The portrait came from Gilbert Stuart, the most celebrated painter in the country, the man who would soon paint the Washington that hangs on the one-dollar bill. Stuart drew Liberty as a graceful, full-figured woman with flowing hair and a draped gown. (Collectors have long repeated that he based her on Ann Willing Bingham, a famous Philadelphia society beauty — a charming tradition, but one the historical record only suggests, never proves.)

A drawing is not a coin, though. Someone had to translate Stuart's flat sketch into a three-dimensional model the Mint's engraver could copy. That job went to John Eckstein.

On September 9, 1795, the Mint paid Eckstein $30 — not for the whole coin, but for two plaster models: one of the Liberty head, one of the reverse eagle-and-wreath. From those models, Chief Engraver Robert Scot cut the dies (the hardened steel stamps that strike the design into metal). The result is the coin collectors call the Draped Bust dollar. Eckstein's hands shaped the face; Scot's engraved the steel.

It is one of the strangest pairings in American coinage. The man hired to model Liberty for a flat fee had, three decades earlier, been court sculptor to one of the most powerful kings in Europe.

From the court of Frederick the Great to a Mint pay slip

Eckstein was born near Nuremberg in 1735 and trained at that city's academy of arts. He was good — good enough that by the 1760s he was working in London, carving part of a monument that still stands in Westminster Abbey and twice winning premiums from the Society of Arts.

Then, in 1765, Frederick the Great of Prussia invited him to court. Eckstein became a royal sculptor, working at the palaces of Potsdam and Sanssouci. He even took the death mask of Frederick himself in 1786. This was a man at the center of European art, carving for kings.

By 1793 he had crossed the Atlantic, settling first in Philadelphia and later associated with Providence, Rhode Island — the address the Mint's accounts attach to his name. He helped found an early Philadelphia art academy and, years later, exhibited a grand equestrian statue of George Washington. He was a working artist scrambling for commissions in a brand-new country, and the dollar model was one job among many.

His reputation in those American years was, frankly, mixed. The portrait painter Thomas Sully — no enemy, just a contemporary — described him as "a thorough-going drudge in the arts." The modern numismatic writer Walter Breen, never one to soften a verdict, called him "a local artistic hack." Whether that's fair is a real question: a drudge is a tireless worker, not necessarily a poor one, and the Draped Bust Liberty is one of the most admired early American designs. Eckstein modeled it; history mostly credited Stuart and Scot. That gap is the heart of his story.

One sharp distinction worth keeping straight: Eckstein's son was also named John, a painter who worked in England and the West Indies. The two are easy to confuse — even careful sources do. The Mint's Eckstein is the father, the old court sculptor.

Key facts

Full name
Johann (John) Eckstein
Born
25 November 1735, Poppenreuth, near Nuremberg (Germany)
Died
27 June 1817, Havana, Cuba
Nationality
German-born; worked in England, Prussia, then the United States
Role at the U.S. Mint
Modeled Gilbert Stuart's Liberty in plaster (1795); not the die engraver
Famous payment
$30, paid 9 September 1795, for two plaster models
Signature work
The Draped Bust Liberty portrait, used across U.S. silver 1795–1807

What he actually made — and what he didn't

It's worth being precise, because the credit is genuinely tangled. Stuart drew the design. Eckstein modeled it in plaster. Robert Scot engraved the dies and oversaw production, with sketches approved by Mint Director Henry William DeSaussure and sent on to President Washington and Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson. No single person "designed" the Draped Bust coinage the way one designer owns a modern coin.

So when you see a slab labeled "Scot / Eckstein," that's the honest shorthand: the engraver and the modeler, working from a famous painter's idea. Eckstein's plaster is the bridge between Stuart's paper and Scot's steel — and the reason the same serene Liberty appears on dollars, half dollars, dimes, and more for over a decade.

The reverse evolved while his portrait stayed. The earliest coins carry a small, naturalistic perched eagle. In 1798 the Mint switched to the Heraldic Eagle — the wings-spread, shield-breasted eagle lifted from the Great Seal of the United States. The obverse — the heads side — kept Eckstein's Liberty throughout.

Questions people ask

Did John Eckstein design the Draped Bust dollar?

Not single-handedly. The portrait was drawn by painter Gilbert Stuart; Eckstein translated that drawing into two plaster models (a Liberty head and a reverse eagle-and-wreath); and Mint Chief Engraver Robert Scot cut the actual dies. Eckstein was the sculptor-modeler in the middle of that chain, paid $30 on 9 September 1795.

How much was Eckstein paid for the Liberty model?

Thirty dollars, recorded on 9 September 1795. The payment covered two plaster models — not the engraving or production of the coin itself.

Was Eckstein really a court sculptor to Frederick the Great?

Yes. Before emigrating to America he worked for the Prussian king at Potsdam and Sanssouci, and took Frederick's death mask in 1786. His American Mint work came late in a long European career.

Is the Mint's John Eckstein the same as the painter John Eckstein?

They are father and son, both named John. The Mint's Eckstein is the German-born father (1735–1817). His son was a painter active in England and the West Indies. Sources sometimes conflate them.

Who was the model for the Draped Bust Liberty?

Tradition holds it was Ann Willing Bingham, a Philadelphia society figure, but that identification is a long-repeated suggestion, not a documented fact. The drawing itself is credited to Gilbert Stuart.

Sources