Designer

James Peed

The Mint's quiet hand behind the FDR half eagle and the first U.S. gold coin in fifty years

When the United States struck its first gold coin in half a century — the 1984 Olympic eagle — the running torch-bearers on its face began as a sketch by a North Carolina painter named James Peed. He spent a career as the U.S. Mint's graphics manager, and his work keeps turning up on the coins people still collect.

Who he was

James Melvin Peed was born on April 25, 1945, in the small port town of Washington, North Carolina. His path to the U.S. Mint did not run through an art academy at first — it ran through the U.S. Army, where he served from 1963 to 1966.

Only afterward did he chase the training. He studied at the Corcoran School of Art in Washington, D.C. in 1969, took classes at Northern Virginia Community College in 1971–72, and attended the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts — one of the oldest art schools in the country — in 1973.

He joined the Mint's staff in 1972 and worked as a graphic artist in its Washington, D.C. office from 1975, eventually rising to manage the Mint's graphics group. That title is worth pausing on. Peed was not primarily a sculptor-engraver — the in-house artists who cut and model a coin's relief — but a designer who shaped the drawing a coin starts from. On more than one famous piece, his idea on paper became someone else's three-dimensional model in steel.

His craft and role

The clearest example is the 1984 Olympic ten-dollar gold eagle. It was a landmark: the first gold coin the United States struck since 1933, and the first U.S. coin to carry the "W" mint mark of the West Point Mint. Its obverse — the heads side — shows a male and a female runner lifting an Olympic torch together. That image grew from a concept sketch by James Peed, which the Mint's John Mercanti then designed and modeled into the finished coin. The drawing was Peed's; the steel relief was a collaboration.

You see the same division of labor on his best-known piece, the 1997 Franklin Delano Roosevelt five-dollar gold half eagle. Peed designed its reverse — the tails side — choosing to render the Presidential Seal as it appeared at FDR's 1933 inauguration. The sculptor Thomas D. Rogers translated that design into a model. (The obverse portrait of Roosevelt was the work of Mint sculptor-engraver T. James Ferrell.)

His hand shows up across the modern commemorative era this way: the reverse of the 1992 Olympic five-dollar gold half eagle, the reverse modeling for the 1997 Jackie Robinson five-dollar gold coin, and the reverse of the 1998 Robert F. Kennedy silver dollar, done with Thomas D. Rogers Sr. Beyond circulating-format coins, he won the competition to design the 1986 Vietnam Veterans National Medal — a reminder that the man who drew Olympic runners had himself worn the uniform two decades earlier.

Key facts

Born
April 25, 1945, Washington, North Carolina
Nationality
American
U.S. Army service
1963–1966
Training
Corcoran School of Art (1969); Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (1973)
Mint role
Joined Mint staff 1972; manager of the graphics group
Signature coin
1997 FDR $5 gold half eagle (reverse)
Historic credit
Concept sketch behind the 1984 Olympic $10 gold eagle obverse

Questions collectors ask

Which coin is James Peed best known for?

The 1997 Franklin Delano Roosevelt five-dollar gold half eagle, whose reverse he designed — a rendering of the Presidential Seal as it appeared at FDR's 1933 inauguration. The sculptor Thomas D. Rogers modeled it; the Roosevelt portrait on the obverse was by T. James Ferrell.

Did James Peed design the 1984 Olympic gold coin?

The famous obverse — two runners raising an Olympic torch — began as a concept sketch by Peed, which John Mercanti then designed and modeled into the finished 1984 ten-dollar gold eagle. That coin was the first U.S. gold coin struck since 1933 and the first to carry the West Point 'W' mint mark.

Was Peed a sculptor-engraver at the Mint?

Not chiefly. He managed the Mint's graphics group and worked as a designer — the artist who shapes the drawing a coin starts from. On several coins his design was modeled into relief by a sculptor-engraver such as Thomas D. Rogers.

What other coins did James Peed work on?

Among others: the reverse of the 1992 Olympic five-dollar gold half eagle, reverse modeling for the 1997 Jackie Robinson five-dollar gold coin, and the reverse of the 1998 Robert F. Kennedy silver dollar (with Thomas D. Rogers Sr.). He also won the competition to design the 1986 Vietnam Veterans National Medal.

Sources