Who he was
James Melvin Peed was born in Washington, North Carolina, on April 25, 1945. Before he ever touched a coin he served in the U.S. Army from 1963 to 1966, then went looking for art training — the Corcoran School of Art in Washington, D.C. in 1969, Northern Virginia Community College in 1971–72, and the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in 1973.
He joined the U.S. Mint staff in 1972 and, from 1975, worked as a graphic artist out of the Mint's Washington, D.C. office. He rose to manage the Mint's graphics group. That title matters for understanding his work: Peed was not a marble-and-clay sculptor by trade but a designer — the person who drew the picture that another artist would then sculpt into metal.
He is a member of the American Medallic Sculpture Association. Unlike the engravers whose initials get hunted by collectors, Peed worked largely in the background of programs the public knew by their famous subjects, not their artists.