The engraver who started it all
In November 1793, yellow fever was killing Philadelphians by the thousands. One of the dead was Joseph Wright, the engraver the brand-new United States Mint had been counting on. The Mint needed someone to cut the dies for the nation's first coins — and fast. The man they chose was a 48-year-old Scot named Robert Scot.
He was born in 1745 in the Canongate, a steep old street in Edinburgh, Scotland. He trained first as a watchmaker — patient, close work with tiny tools — and then learned line engraving, the art of cutting an image into metal so it can be printed or stamped. By the time he was thirty he had crossed the Atlantic to Virginia, where he engraved the plates for the colony's paper money and, during the Revolution, served as engraver to the Commonwealth of Virginia under a young governor named Thomas Jefferson.
In 1781 he moved to Philadelphia, the center of the new nation's money. He cut plates for the financier Robert Morris and built a reputation as one of the few skilled engravers in America. So when Wright died, Scot was the obvious choice. On November 23, 1793, he was commissioned the first Chief Engraver of the United States Mint — a post he would hold until the day he died, thirty years later. His salary was $1,200 a year.
That is the "so what" of Robert Scot. Almost every coin an American carried for a generation — the copper cent in a farmer's hand, the silver dollar in a merchant's strongbox, the gold eagle locked in a bank vault — bore a design he had cut. He didn't just make coins. He gave a brand-new country its everyday face.