Who he was
Arthur Graham Carey was not a Mint engraver, and he never tried to be one. He was a craftsman and a thinker — a man who built a long career around a single question: what makes an object made by hand worth making at all?
Born in 1892, Carey became one of the most influential American voices for sacred and liturgical art in the twentieth century. He settled in Newport, Rhode Island, and turned his energy toward the idea that good work — honest, useful, beautiful objects made with skill — was itself a kind of spiritual practice. He founded the journal The Catholic Art Quarterly, later renamed Good Work, and in 1937 he helped found the Catholic Art Association, which he advised for the rest of its life.
So when Rhode Island needed someone to design a coin in 1936, the choice was less strange than it sounds. Carey lived in the state, moved in its art circles, and had a partner who could carve.