Who he was
Most coin designers are sculptors first. Robert Bennett Lamb was a calligrapher — a man who spent his life drawing letters by hand, and who one day talked the U.S. government into letting him do the same thing on gold.
Lamb was born in Cranston, Rhode Island, on May 25, 1922. He graduated from the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy in 1944, then turned to art: a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1952, and a Master of Fine Arts from Cornell University in 1954. He settled in Lincoln, Rhode Island, where he lived and worked. He died on February 26, 2012, at 89.
He is not a famous name. His reputation in numismatics — the study and collecting of coins and money — rests on a single, surprising year. In 1991 his hand-drawn lettering appeared on two United States commemorative coins, and one of them broke a rule that had held for the entire history of the Mint.