Designer

Matthew Peloso

The Philadelphia Mint sculptor whose hands helped carve Liberty's torch.

He spent forty years shaping things you'd never connect to him — tool casings, wax-museum heads, courthouse carvings. Then, late in life, a Mint chief engraver invited him in, and Matthew Peloso ended his career carving the torch on the 1986 Statue of Liberty silver dollar.

Who he was

Most of the people who shape a coin never get their name on it. Matthew Peloso spent most of his life as exactly that kind of craftsman — skilled, productive, anonymous.

He was born in Salerno, Italy, on October 9, 1918, and came to the United States as a small child. He grew up in Brooklyn and built a long working career in sculpture and industrial model-making. For years he was a model maker at Black & Decker in Towson, Maryland, designing the casings and shapes of power tools — the kind of object that has to look right and feel right in a hand.

The rest of his portfolio reads like a tour of mid-century American craft work. He made roughly a hundred portrait heads for wax museums. He sculpted life-size figures for a Smithsonian natural-history exhibit. He carved fifteen wood sculptures for the county courthouse in Towson. None of it carried his name to the public. All of it was the patient, physical work of getting a three-dimensional thing exactly right — the same discipline a coin demands.

His craft and his Mint years

In 1973, that quiet career took a turn. Frank Gasparro — then the Chief Engraver of the United States Mint, the man who designed the Lincoln Memorial cent reverse and the Kennedy half dollar — invited Peloso to join the Engraving Department in Philadelphia. Peloso took the job and stayed until 1986.

A word on the role. A Mint sculptor-engraver doesn't usually sketch a coin from scratch. The job is to take a design — sometimes their own, often someone else's — and translate it into a precise sculpted model in low relief (the raised height of the design above the flat field of the coin). That model is reduced and cut into the steel dies — the hardened stamps that strike the metal. It is unglamorous, exacting work, and it is where a flat drawing becomes a coin you can hold.

Peloso's name attaches to that supporting craft more than to famous front-of-coin designs. He engraved dies for a string of U.S. Mint medals across the 1970s and 1980s — among them a Mark Twain gold medallion and medals honoring various public figures. He is also recorded as having assisted Chief Engraver Elizabeth Jones on the reverse of the very first modern U.S. commemorative, the 1982 George Washington half dollar, though Jones is credited as that coin's designer. Collectors tell a story — fitting for a sculptor used to going unsigned — that Peloso quietly tucked his initials "MP" into the shrubbery beside Mount Vernon on that reverse, and that the Mint's director only noticed at the unveiling. It's a good story; treat it as collector lore rather than documented fact.

His most visible work came at the end. On the 1986 Statue of Liberty silver dollar, struck for the statue's hundredth anniversary, Peloso worked with John Mercanti on the reverse — the "tails" side. It carries the torch of the Statue of Liberty and the famous lines from Emma Lazarus: "GIVE ME YOUR TIRED, YOUR POOR, YOUR HUDDLED MASSES YEARNING TO BREATHE FREE." For an immigrant who arrived in this country as a child, it was a quietly fitting note to end on. He left the Mint that same year.

Key facts

Born
October 9, 1918 — Salerno, Italy
Nationality
Italian-American (emigrated to the U.S. as a child)
Role
Sculptor-engraver, Philadelphia Mint, 1973–1986
Invited to the Mint by
Chief Engraver Frank Gasparro
Best-known coin
1986 Statue of Liberty silver dollar — reverse, with John Mercanti
Other Mint work
U.S. Mint medals (1970s–1980s); assisted on the 1982 Washington half dollar reverse
Died
Reported January 4, 2008 (single source — unverified)

Questions collectors ask

What did Matthew Peloso design on the 1986 Statue of Liberty silver dollar?

He worked with John Mercanti on the reverse — the side showing the Statue of Liberty's torch and the Emma Lazarus lines 'Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free.' Mercanti designed the obverse, with the statue and Ellis Island.

Was Peloso a coin designer or an engraver?

Primarily a sculptor-engraver. Mint engravers take a design and translate it into a precise sculpted model and the steel dies that strike the coin. Peloso's credits are mostly in that supporting craft — turning designs, including others', into finished coins and medals.

How did he end up at the U.S. Mint?

Chief Engraver Frank Gasparro invited him into the Philadelphia Mint's Engraving Department in 1973. Before that, Peloso had a long career in sculpture and industrial model-making, including work for Black & Decker, the Smithsonian, and wax museums.

Are his initials hidden on any coin?

Collectors tell a story that Peloso tucked an 'MP' into the shrubbery on the reverse of the 1982 Washington half dollar, which he is said to have assisted on. It's a charming tale, but it's collector lore rather than firmly documented — that coin is officially credited to Elizabeth Jones.

Sources