US coin · series

The Panama-Pacific Quarter Eagle: a sea-horse, a world's fair, and a coin almost nobody bought

America's first $2.50 gold commemorative — and the one the public mostly left on the table.

In 1915 San Francisco threw the party of the century to show the world it had risen from earthquake and fire. The Mint struck a tiny gold coin for the occasion — and then melted almost a third of them when buyers stayed away. The survivors are now among the most prized commemoratives in American gold.

The story behind the coin

In 1906 an earthquake and the fire that followed leveled much of San Francisco. Less than a decade later, the city wanted to prove it had not just rebuilt but arrived. The occasion was the Panama–Pacific International Exposition of 1915 — a vast world's fair on the city's waterfront, timed to celebrate the opening of the Panama Canal, the new shortcut that had just cut a continent in two and pulled the Pacific closer to the world's trade.

A fair this ambitious wanted souvenirs to match. Congress obliged. On January 16, 1915, President Woodrow Wilson signed the act authorizing a sweep of commemorative coins for the exposition — and among them was something the United States had never struck before: a $2.50 gold commemorative, the quarter eagle. ("Quarter eagle" was the old nickname for the $2.50 gold piece — a quarter of the $10 "eagle.")

Here is the twist. The fair's coins were sold to the public, not spent into circulation, and the public was underwhelmed. Of the quarter eagles struck, more than three thousand went unsold. In late 1916 the Mint did what it did with leftover commemoratives — it melted them back into bullion. The coin's scarcity today is not a story of how few were made. It is a story of how few people wanted one at the time.

The design

The little coin packs in a whole allegory. The obverse — the heads side — was the work of Charles E. Barber, the Mint's chief engraver. It shows Columbia, the female figure who stood for America, riding a hippocampus — a mythical sea-horse, part horse and part fish. The image reads as the United States riding across the new ocean passage the canal had opened. In her hand she holds a caduceus, the winged staff entwined with serpents. It is usually a symbol of commerce, but on this coin it carries a second, pointed meaning: the conquest of yellow fever, the disease that had killed canal workers by the thousands until sanitation engineers finally beat it back.

The reverse — the tails side — came from George T. Morgan, the engraver whose name is forever attached to the Morgan dollar. He gave it an eagle perched on a standard, with the motto E PLURIBUS UNUM ("out of many, one") and the denomination. Two of the most famous hands in American coinage, then, on a coin barely the size of a dime.

The result is a small, dense, gold tableau — and one of the few US coins where you have to read the design to understand what the country was trying to say about itself in 1915.

Key facts

Year & mint
1915, San Francisco (S)
Denomination
$2.50 (quarter eagle), gold
Obverse designer
Charles E. Barber — Columbia on a hippocampus
Reverse designer
George T. Morgan — eagle on a standard
Composition
90% gold, 10% copper
Weight / diameter
4.18 g / 18 mm, reeded edge
Struck
10,017 (10,000 authorized + 17 for assay)
Melted
3,251 unsold pieces, late 1916
Net distributed
6,749
Authorizing act
Act of January 16, 1915 (signed by Woodrow Wilson)
Original sale price
$4.00 each at the exposition
Distinction
First $2.50 gold commemorative in US history

Collecting it

There is only one date and one mint for this coin: the 1915-S. That simplicity is part of its appeal — to own the type, you own the only issue there ever was. The whole challenge sits in two places: condition, and company.

On condition: with just 6,749 distributed, even a worn example is genuinely scarce, and the survivors were often handled as keepsakes rather than carefully stored. That means truly high-grade pieces — sharp, lustrous, untouched — are the real prizes, and grade drives price far more than rarity of date does here. ("Grade" is the standard score for a coin's preservation; "Mint State" means it never circulated.)

On company: the quarter eagle was one of five Panama-Pacific coins. Alongside it came a silver half dollar, a gold dollar, and — the giants of the set — two enormous $50 gold pieces, one round and one octagonal (eight-sided), the largest US coins of the era. Promoter Farran Zerbe sold them at the fair singly and in elaborate framed and boxed sets through his "Money of the World" exhibit. Collectors who chase the complete set are chasing those colossal fifties; the quarter eagle is the most attainable gold member, which is exactly why it is so many people's first taste of Pan-Pac gold.

Questions collectors ask

Why is the 1915-S Panama-Pacific quarter eagle so collectible if 10,000 were struck?

Because most were never sold. The public passed on them, and in late 1916 the Mint melted 3,251 unsold pieces, leaving only 6,749 distributed. The scarcity comes from low demand at the time, not low production — and it makes high-grade survivors genuinely hard to find.

Who designed the Panama-Pacific quarter eagle?

Two of the Mint's most famous engravers split the work. Charles E. Barber designed the obverse — Columbia riding a mythical sea-horse (a hippocampus) and holding a caduceus. George T. Morgan, of Morgan-dollar fame, designed the reverse eagle.

What does the obverse design actually mean?

It's an allegory of the Panama Canal. Columbia, standing for America, rides across the new ocean passage on a sea-horse. The caduceus in her hand symbolizes commerce — and, by tradition tied to this coin, the medical victory over yellow fever that finally let the canal be built.

Was this really the first $2.50 gold commemorative?

Yes. The 1915-S Panama-Pacific quarter eagle was the first $2.50 gold commemorative the United States ever issued. Earlier commemoratives had appeared in silver and in gold dollars, but never in the quarter-eagle denomination.

How was it sold, and for how much?

It sold for $4.00 at the exposition — well above its $2.50 face value — through the coin and medal department run by promoter Farran Zerbe. He also offered it as part of multi-coin sets in special framed and boxed holders that are collectible in their own right today.

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