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The Nickel Dated 1759 — Decades Before the Mint Existed

A five-cent coin the U.S. Mint made on purpose, dated wrong on purpose, and never meant you to have.

There is a real United States five-cent coin stamped with the date 1759 — thirty-three years before the U.S. Mint struck its first cent. It isn't a counterfeit or a mistake. It's a test piece, and the wrong date is the whole point.

A coin dated 1759 on purpose

The first U.S. Mint coin was struck in 1792. So a five-cent piece dated 1759 should be impossible. Yet the Mint made it — deliberately, with the wrong date baked into the die.

The reason is one of the quiet jobs every mint has to do: it has to test things. New presses. New metal blends. New planchets — the blank metal discs that get stamped into coins. To do that, you strike practice pieces. But you can't run those trials on real designs like the Jefferson nickel. If a stray test strike escaped, collectors would treat it as a rare variety, and a fake "rarity" born from a factory experiment would poison the market.

So the Mint uses a decoy. It strikes its trials on a pattern — a coin made to try out an idea rather than to spend — carrying a design that exists nowhere in circulation and never will. These are called nonsense dies: art chosen precisely because it means nothing. The Martha Washington motif is the Mint's most famous one, and the 1759 date is its signature flourish. That was the year Martha married George Washington — true history, impossible coinage. Anyone who sees it knows instantly: this was never money.

What the coin shows, and who drew it

The obverse — the heads side — carries a bust of Martha Washington facing right, with the inscription naming her and the date 1759 below. The reverse — the tails side — shows Mount Vernon, the Washington family home in Virginia, with a legend that names it. Plain, dignified, and completely outside the real coinage lineup.

The Martha Washington dies were prepared at the Mint in 1965. The portrait was the work of Mint sculptor-engraver Edward R. Grove; the Mount Vernon reverse was designed by Philip Fowler. The pair were created to test silver-replacement alloys for the dime, quarter, and half dollar as the country dropped silver from its coinage — and the design proved so useful as an all-purpose decoy that the Mint kept reaching for it for decades.

This particular row is the five-cent version, catalogued as Judd-2182 and struck around 1985. Its job was specific: to try out a new Schuler coin press, the kind of high-speed German-built machine the Mint installs to stamp millions of coins. It was struck in nickel, with a plain edge, at roughly the five-gram weight of a real Jefferson nickel. A telltale detail collectors use to confirm it: Grove's initials sit beneath the bust, and the tree on the reverse touches the A in WASHINGTON.

Key facts

What it is
U.S. Mint test piece (pattern), not a circulating coin
Denomination
5 cents
Date on the coin
1759 (a 'nonsense' date — Martha Washington's marriage year)
Actually struck
circa 1985
Catalog reference
Judd-2182
What it tested
A new Schuler coin press
Composition
Nickel
Weight
≈5 g (near the statutory Jefferson nickel weight)
Edge
Plain
Obverse designer
Edward R. Grove (Martha Washington bust, dies prepared 1965)
Reverse designer
Philip Fowler (Mount Vernon)
Rarity
Very rare; only a handful known (Judd lists it as R-7)

Collecting it

These were never sold and never released. Test pieces are supposed to stay inside the Mint and be destroyed — many are deliberately waffled (run through a machine that crushes them into ridged scrap) so they can't pose as coins. The few that survive intact reached collectors through unofficial channels over the years, which is exactly why they're scarce and why each one is a small puzzle to authenticate.

That scarcity is the appeal. A Martha Washington five-cent test piece is a physical fingerprint of the Mint's R&D — proof of a machine being broken in, or a metal being weighed against the cost of the next decade of pocket change. Condition and the specific Judd number drive value, and because so few exist, a single grade point can move the price sharply. Treat any "Martha Washington nickel" with caution: provenance and a reputable holder matter more here than for almost any everyday coin, because the population is tiny and the temptation to misattribute is real.

The story didn't end in the 1980s. When Congress passed the Coin Modernization, Oversight, and Continuity Act of 2010, the Mint revived freshly cut Martha Washington dies to strike five-cent test pieces in candidate alloys during trials around 2011 and 2013 — studying whether the nickel could be made more cheaply. Those later five-cent trials (catalogued separately, such as Judd-2210) are a direct descendant of the same idea: when the Mint needs to experiment on the nickel without making history, Martha Washington and the year 1759 are still on call.

Questions collectors ask

Why is a U.S. coin dated 1759 when the Mint started in 1792?

The date is fake on purpose. It's a 'nonsense' date — 1759 was the year Martha married George Washington — chosen so the test piece can never be mistaken for a real, circulating coin. An impossible date is a clear signal that this was a Mint experiment, not money.

Is the Martha Washington five-cent piece a real coin or a counterfeit?

It's real and made by the U.S. Mint, but it was never legal tender and never released. It's a test piece — a pattern struck to try out equipment or a metal, using a decoy design instead of the Jefferson nickel.

What was Judd-2182 actually testing?

It was struck around 1985 to test a new Schuler coin press at the Mint. The piece itself didn't need to be a usable coin; it just had to run through the press at about the right size and weight, which is why it's nickel at roughly five grams with a plain edge.

Who designed the Martha Washington test pieces?

The dies were prepared in 1965. Mint engraver Edward R. Grove created the Martha Washington portrait, and Philip Fowler designed the Mount Vernon reverse. The same motif was reused for decades whenever the Mint needed a neutral test design.

How rare is it, and why are so few around?

Very rare. Test pieces are meant to stay inside the Mint and are often destroyed, so only a handful survived. Judd rates this one R-7, meaning only a small number are believed to exist.

Were there later Martha Washington nickels too?

Yes. Under the 2010 Coin Modernization Act, the Mint cut new Martha Washington dies and struck five-cent test pieces in alternative alloys around 2011 and 2013 to study a cheaper nickel. Those are catalogued separately (for example, Judd-2210).

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