Who he was
William C. Cousins was born in Philadelphia on July 13, 1930 — the city that has been home to the U.S. Mint since the country began. But he did not start his career there. He spent more than two decades a few miles down the road at the Franklin Mint, a private company famous for medals and collectibles, where he worked as a staff sculptor from 1967 to 1990 and rose to director of sculpture.
That made him a master of the medallist's craft before he ever cut a circulating coin. A sculptor-engraver builds a design in relief — first as a large clay or plaster model, then reduced to coin size — judging at every step how light will catch the high and low points once the piece is struck in metal. Cousins had done it on hundreds of medals.
In 1990, at sixty, he joined the United States Mint as a staff sculptor-engraver. He stayed a decade and retired in 2000. It was a short federal career — but he arrived just in time for two of the most-circulated coin projects of the modern era.