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1
United States Mint
Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee
Meeting
Tuesday, November 29, 2011
The Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee met in
Conference Room A, Second Floor, at 801 9th
Street, N.W., Washington, D.C., at 9:00 a.m., Gary
Marks, Chair, presiding.

2
CCAC Members Present:
Gary Marks, Chair
Michael Bugeja
Erik Jansen
Michael Moran
Michael Olson
Donald Scarinci
Heidi Wastweet
United States Mint Staff Present:
Richard A. Peterson, Deputy Director
Kaarina Budow
Don Everhart
Andy Fishburn
Ron Harrigal
Leslie Schlager
Greg Weinman

3
Contents
Welcome and Call to Order

4

Swearing-in of New Member

4

Discussion of Letter and Minutes from Previous
Meetings

7

Review and Discuss Candidate Designs for the 2013
America the Beautiful Quarter Designs
8
Review and Discuss Candidate Designs for the 2012
Platinum Program
67
Review and Discuss Candidate Designs for the 2012
First Spouse Bullion Coin Program
105
Annual Report Discussion

145

Conclude Meeting

166

4
Proceedings
9:05 a.m.
Welcome and Call to Order
Chair Marks: I'm going to go ahead and call this
meeting to order, a meeting of the CCAC for
Tuesday, November 29, 2011. We have got a big
day in front of us. We have got a total of 89 designs
covering, I believe, it is 14 coin faces, spread over
three different programs. So we have got our work
cut out for us and also later we will be talking about
some of our recommendations for our next annual
report.
And then I would make a note on the agenda, the
4:00 p.m. item, the presentation by Michael Bugeja,
we're going to move that to probably our
subsequent meeting and give Michael a little more
time and also give him the benefit of our full
attention. I am thinking that by 4:00 this afternoon,
we might not all be there.
So, I might ask you if Doreen Bolger on the line?
Mr. Weinman: Is Doreen on? No.
Chair Marks: Okay. I will note for the record that in
the room we have Michael Bugeja, Erik Jansen,
myself, Gary Marks, Michael Olson, Donald Scarinci,
Heidi Wastweet, and Michael Moran, who we will be
introduced to here just shortly.
Swearing-in of New Member
In fact, with that, we are going to move our first
item on the agenda, which is the swearing in of our
new member, Michael Moran. And Acting Director
Dick Peterson is here and I will ask him to take the
floor.
Mr. Peterson: So Michael, if you could join me up
front here.
Let me swear you in. This is the oath of office that

5
every public servant takes. And so before we do
this, we would thank you in advance for your
service. And I have taken this oath twice; once
going into the Navy and once coming into the Mint.
And I think as you read this and then later we will
have you sign inside the Bible. It is quite moving.
So Michael if you could raise your right hand and
place your left hand on the Bible and repeat after
me. I, Michael Moran -Member Moran: I, Michael Moran, -Mr. Peterson: -- will support and defend the
Constitution of the United States-Member Moran: -- will support and defend the
Constitution of the United States-Mr. Peterson: -- against all enemies, foreign and
domestic; -Member Moran: -- against all enemies, foreign and
domestic; -Mr. Peterson: -- that I will bear true faith and
allegiance to the same; -Member Moran: -- I will bear true faith and
allegiance to the same; -Mr. Peterson: -- that I take this obligation freely; -Member Moran: -- I take this obligation freely; -Mr. Peterson: -- without any mental reservation or
purpose of evasion; -Member Moran: -- without any mental reservation
or purpose of evasion; -Mr. Peterson: -- and that I will well and faithfully
discharge the duties -Member Moran: -- I will well and faithfully discharge
the duties --

6
Mr. Peterson: -- of the office on which I am about to
enter; -Member Moran: -- of the office on which I am about
to enter; -Mr. Peterson: -- So help me God.
Member Moran: -- So help me God.
Mr. Peterson: Thank you and congratulations.
(Applause.)
Mr. Peterson: So Michael has a distinguished career
in numismatics and we will let him tell you about it.
But he has written a very interesting book on the
old San Francisco Mint and I just want to note that
the new San Francisco Mint will be 75 years old this
year in 2012.
And so, Michael, please give us your comments.
Member Moran: I will say when I wrote the article
on the San Francisco Mint, that was where I learned
about Frank Leach and he was a first class director.
I learned that the Mint really did generate an
element of professional pride and camaraderie that
was to be respected at that point in time and I am
sure I am going to see it here as well.
I will tell you one quick story and then I am going to
sit down because we have got a long agenda. What
really got me started on Saint-Gaudens, I was a
collector for a long time, my grandfather got me
started on Indian Head pennies. But back in 1960, I
decided I was going to get a $20 gold piece. It was
the prettiest thing I ever had seen. I had no idea
who Saint-Gaudens was. So I saved up my lawn
mowing money all one summer and bought a gold
piece. It wasn't a rare one but it was a nice one,
1924. It cost me $47.50, which was my entire
earnings that summer at $2 a pop mowing yards,
plus three percent sales tax.
I brought it home really proud of it. And I show it to

7
my father and he flips it over on the back. And he
says what does that say Mike down there? I said
well, Dad, it says twenty dollars. He says tell me
again what you paid for that. That was the end of it.
I mean, you could hear the air going out of the
balloon. But I still have that $20 gold piece and,
yes, I got the last laugh.
Anyway, I am proud to be here. I am proud to be a
part of this organization in this small way and I
hope that I can help it in any way I can. And with
that, I will sit down and be quiet.
(Applause.)
Chair Marks: Thank you, Michael, and welcome to
our committee.
I spent some time with Michael last night and I
know that he is going to be a wealth of knowledge
and information on numismatic subjects. So, I think
Michael is going to be a great addition.
Discussion of Letter and Minutes from Previous
Meetings
Okay, the next item on our agenda is our discussion
of the minutes and the letter to the Secretary
covering our September 27, 2011 meeting. You all
received a copy of the letter and the minutes in
your packet. Is there any discussion or comment on
either of those documents?
Member Olson: Move to approve.
Chair Marks: I have a motion to approve. Is there a
second?
Moved and seconded to approve the minutes and
the letter for the September 27, 2011 meeting.
Is there any discussion? Hearing none, all those in
favor please say aye.
(Chorus of ayes.)

8
Chair Marks: Opposed? Motion carries unanimously.
We will now move down to the review and
discussion of candidate designs for the 2013
America the Beautiful Quarter designs. And I
understand Ron Harrigal will present the designs.
Ron?
Review and Discuss Candidate Designs for the 2013
America the Beautiful Quarter Designs
Mr. Harrigal: Okay, good morning, everyone.
The 2013 design candidates for America the
Beautiful Program. The United States Mint America
the Beautiful Coin Program is a multi-year initiative
authorized by Public Law 110-456, the America's
Beautiful National Parks Quarter Dollar Coin Act of
2008. The Act directs United States Mint to mint
and issue 56 circulating quarter dollars with reverse
tail side designs emblematic of the national parks or
other national sites in each the District of Columbia,
the U.S. Territories Puerto Rico, Guam, American
Samoa, the Virgin Islands, Northern Mariana
Islands, and of course the states.
The quarters are issued sequentially each year in
the order of which is a featured site was established
as a national park or a site.
I would like to bring the first picture up of course is
the common obverse which we started for this
program with the restored 1932 portrait of George
Washington by John Flanagan, including subtle
details of the beauty in the original model. The
inscriptions are United States of America, Liberty, In
God We Trust and Quarter Dollar.
The first reverse design is White Mountains National
Forest. Established as a federal site in 1918, the
800,000 White Mountains National Forest located in
New Hampshire and Maine, mostly of course in New
Hampshire, is managed by the United States
Department of Agriculture, U.S. Forest Service.

9
The forest draws those who seek adventures,
spectacular views and/or wildlife viewing. Hikers are
treated to hikes above the tree lines in the alpine
area. Others hope to catch sites of moose or other
wildlife and enjoy the back country. And millions of
visitors travel each year through this area, enjoying
some types of recreation areas along the way as
they see fit. The White Mountains National Forest,
land of many uses, reads the sign as it greets you
as you come into the multiple-use managed forest
lands here.
In creating this site, we were presented with some
unique challenges. Because many mountain peaks
and vistas are in the park, the White Mountains
National Forest can be viewed from many areas.
Some of the designs, viewpoints are from states or
privates lands looking into the forest.
The first design, NH-1. The design depicts Mount
Washington, the highest peak in the Northeastern
United States at 6,288 feet, framed by white birch
trees located in the White Mountains National
Forest. The design has you looking to the east side
of Mount Washington, which is the northern part of
the forest. White birch trees are an iconic species
that symbolize the regeneration of forest after
disturbance within the forest, such as fire or wind.
They are not specific to this forest, however, they
are found in abundance here.
Mount Washington is located in the Presidential
Mountain Range, a landmark familiar to many
visitors of the White Mountains National Forest.
And just as an anecdote here, the white birch tree is
the state tree of New Hampshire.
The second design, the design depicts Mount
Chocorua, the eastern most peak of the Sandwich
Range, framed by birch trees. Other elements are
not necessarily managed by the National Forest
Service but the main focal point, Mount Chocorua,
is.

10
This view is an iconic image of the White Mountains
National Forest. You would be standing at a picnic
site, looking across the lake into the forest system
lands.
The same image, same source images were used in
this design. Number three, the design depicts two
white-tailed deer amongst the white birch trees in
front of Lake Chocorua. The iconic view of Mount
Chocorua is seen across the lake.
Design four depicts the Bicknell's Thrush, the
Neotropical migratory songbird perched on the
balsam fir tree in the White Mountains National
Forest. The Bicknell's Thrush is only found in the
forest in the summer, when it is time to breed. The
White Mountains Forest offers the largest summer
breeding habitat for the bird.
Design five depicts a moose, which is found in the
National Forest in abundance. While moose can be
found in other areas in North America, according to
the U.S. Forest Service, many visitors hope to see a
moose when they visit the White Mountains National
Forest. The iconic view of Mount Chocorua is seen
across the lake.
And these are our five designs.
Chair Marks: Okay. Would the committee like to go
one at a time with each of the five quarters or do
you want to see them all?
Member Wastweet: I think one at a time.
Chair Marks: We'll do them one at a time?
Member Olson: It would keep better track of them.
Chair Marks: Okay. So at this point, I will thank
you, Ron, for your input. Are there any questions
for Ron and/or if they are design-related, I would
suggest that we direct those to Don Everhart.
Welcome, Don.
Mr. Harrigal: I would like to make one statement

11
that, when the CFA reviewed them, their choice was
the first design.
Member Wastweet: I do have a question, Ron. The
Bicknell's Thrush, is that unique to that area?
Mr. Harrigal: It is not totally unique there but this is
of course the largest habitat for the summer
breeding grounds.
Member Wastweet: And then when you talked to
the park people and they told you what was
important to them about the park, what did they
indicate to you?
Mr. Harrigal: I think I have to turn it over to Kaarina
because she is actually the one -Member Wastweet: Oh, okay.
Mr. Harrigal: -- that had the discussions with the
park. So let me let her speak to that.
Ms. Budow: Hi, good morning. I should consult with
Leslie as well who worked directly with the park.
There were certain vistas that they said were very
emblematic and they indicated of course certain
wildlife, flora and fauna which we tried to focus in.
Anything else, Leslie you can think of?
Ms. Schlager: I would also say Mount Washington,
although it is not managed by the -- The Forest
Service does not manage the entire Mount
Washington area but it is iconic, Mount Chocorua,
and believe it or not, they really thought the moose
was very emblematic because so many people come
to see a moose.
Ms. Budow: We assured that these vistas though
are in the actual park itself. So that is also a
consideration that we always take into account.
Member Wastweet: Was there any talk about the
Lehman Caves?

12
Ms. Schlager: The Lehman Caves are in actually
Great Basin.
Member Wastweet: Oh, sorry. I'm on the wrong
page. Sorry. Thanks.
Chair Marks: Are there any other questions for any
of the staff, technical in nature? I don't want your
opinions necessarily right now but I want to make
sure we have addressed all the technical questions
there might be.
Okay. With that, I will put us into our review. And
Michael Moran, the process is that we kind of go one
at a time. So what I am going to do is I am going to
start with Heidi and I am going to run down the line
but I will give you a break and let you listen to the
rest of us on this first one.
Member Moran: I thought maybe you were going to
make me go first just to initiate me.
Chair Marks: No, I'll have you weigh in last. I will
give you an opportunity to be more towards the
front later on. But being brand new to this, I think
you might appreciate -Member Moran: Thank you.
Chair Marks: -- seeing how each of us kind of go
through our reviews.
So I will start with Heidi. We will come down to Don
and work down the line and we will circle back to
Mr. Moran. Heidi.
Member Wastweet: All right. I don't have any big
discussions here. I know the CFA preferred design
number one. I feel this design is too busy and
exactly what the CFA and CCAC has been asking not
to see. So I am not in favor of number one for that
reason.
Number two, I think would work well. It has a good
composition. There is plenty of interesting negative
space. It will work well for the proof version of the

13
coin. The textures are varied enough that it will give
a sense of depth on the coin. I think number two is
my favorite of these designs.
Number three, I caution anytime you have a
muzzled animal like a deer heading straight into the
viewer like this, it never works well on a coin. It
may look fine on the drawing, not going to work
well on a coin. I am deeply against number three for
that reason.
Number four, I like the idea of using an animal that
is, like Ron said, most of the population is in this
area. It is iconic of that area. However, this design
has too many layers going on. We have a mountain
in the background and then a tree and then the
bird. And the bird has quite a bit of volume to it. So
that is not going to work well within the very narrow
scope of a quarter. We have very little depth to
work with and that is going to compromise the
depth. So I am going to be against number four just
for that reason.
I like the bird. If the background wasn't there. If it
was just the bird and maybe some foliage around it
in a decorative fashion, I think that would have
been my choice but it is not working as presented.
Number five, even though the park was in favor of
the moose, I feel that the moose is too common.
We see this across Montana and Idaho and very
emblematic of Yellowstone. I don't think it is specific
enough just to White Mountain. And so I can't get
excited about the moose.
There is a lot of texture in the background that is
going to obscure the moose when it is reduced
down to the small coin. There is not a lot of polish
going on for the proof version. So I can't get excited
about number five.
So my pick would be number two.
Chair Marks: Thank you, Heidi. We will move down
to Don.

14
Member Scarinci: I was kind of debating between
number one and number two of those that were
presented here. I ruled out, although I want to say
that I want to give you encouragement on number
four and number five because what we keep saying
and I think what the CFA keeps saying and I don't
want to characterize what they are saying, but what
we certainly are telling you is hone in a design
aspect or some unique view, or some isolated -- you
know, isolate rather than attempt on a small piece,
a small disc of metal the size of a quarter to depict
something as grand and as beautiful as one of these
parks. So isolate, identify, and pick out something
that is iconic to it.
So I really wrestled with, well, then why won't I
support number four and number five. And I guess I
would support certainly number four if there had
been more support from the park, from the people
who really know the park.
I could understand number one. One, number one if
it were a dollar coin, a dollar size or a half dollar
size, I think number one has a lot of potential,
especially in the proof version. But as Heidi points
out, just too busy for a coin and way too busy for a
small coin.
My only -- you know, the last time I think New
Hampshire had a mountain depicted on it, the
mountain was on the state quarter and that
mountain ceased to exist. So what is very neat
about coins throughout history is that a lot of the
things that we know about the ancient world, we
only know because an image of it was captured on a
coin and that is now the case with the New
Hampshire state quarter, you know, which for
thousands of years, that mountain will continue to
be known because of that state quarter and
memorialized forever there.
And I think that is one of the things we try to
achieve, I think, with our coins. And with a program
like this, depicting some of these natural wonders

15
that are preserved for all of us to see, you know, I
think -So anyway, I think I am coming down on number
two, unless somebody is going to persuade me
about the bird.
The moose, I don't think I am persuadable about
the moose because even though you captured a
detail that, you know, kind of looks like Bullwinkle, I
think. So I am not there on the moose.
I could be persuaded on the bird, depending on
what people say.
Chair Marks: Thank you, Donald.
First of all, I will say that the artists have produced I
think some great renderings here. I guess where I
get hung up is that we are presented with these
designs and they are, I think, about eight inches
round. And as an eight-inch rendering it looks really
great because we can see all that detail.
Heidi mentioned this idea of too many layers. And
while on an eight-inch variety, I don't think that is a
problem, but sometimes I think that we should be
presented just the little actual-size drawing that is
going to be the coin. Because I think if that is all
that we saw, it would heavily influence our
decisions.
And it circles me back to what Heidi and Don have
just commented on that, on one hand there is too
many layers and I think the way to resolve that is
for what Don said and that is to isolate and find
those iconic images that we can portray on a oneinch disc that for the casual observer glancing at it
as it passes to their hand and into their pocket that
they might immediately know what that image is.
And if we look at number one, while it is a great
eight-inch drawing, I really think that as that goes
in someone's hand and into their pocket, if they
glance at it, it is going to look like a bunch of lines.

16
I'm not sure that there is -- there is not really going
to be a pop for the visual experience.
Number two, Mount Chocorua -- am I pronouncing
that right?
Mr. Harrigal: Mount Chocorua, yes.
Chair Marks: That looks like that could be a grand
image. I wish it was up closer because here again, if
we look at the one-inch rendering down on the
corner here, which is actually what is actually going
to be, it disappears into a very small dimple or spot
on the coin.
Three, the deer, I think are a great add to the
design but here again, there is too much going on.
There is too many layers. There is no one focal point
and the deer becomes so small that while -- if they
were the singular focal point of this design, I think it
might have more punch to it. But I think it is all
diffused.
Number four, I like this one. I wish it could be a
little more simple. I like the fact that the thrush is
very large. To the naked eye, I can look at the oneinch rendering here down in the corner of the page I
have been given and I know immediately that that
is a bird. And we know that birds are very popular,
especially in coins. There are a lot of folks who
collect just bird images on coins.
I think this is a great, it is moving in a great
direction. I think I will move to the numismatic side.
When this design, if it were selected, would be
produced as a proof, I think what we are going to
find is again the punch is robbed away from it or
stolen away from it because what we are going to
have is the bird will be a frosted device but then the
tree behind it, the mountain range behind it, and
the outline of the bird will then be lost on a one-inch
coin.
If the mirrored images could have more wholly
surrounded the bird and given more of that

17
contrast, I think we would have had a much more
dramatic image. But I do like the fact that the bird
is made very large to the point where on a one-inch
coin you can actually decipher what that is.
And then the moose, here again it is a larger image
but even on the business strike we are going to
have a lot of device. It is going to be a solid device
and the only clear area is right up here at the top by
the words White Mountain. So even certainly on the
proof version, you are going to have, and I think
you have seen this on some of the other state park
images that we have had produced in proof version,
that you have a lot of frost. Almost the entire image
is frost. And so there is a lacking in contrast.
In coin art, I think what oftentimes can make the
difference in an image is being able to balance those
mirrored images with those frosted images, so that
there is contrast and pop to the design.
The moose I think is nice and big. I like that. I'm
not so crazy about cutting off his legs. But as a coin,
it is just, it is going to be a lot of device and there
would not be a whole lot of pop.
So at this point, I think my choice would probably
be number four, although I think there is room to
improve that. And I am taking Don's comments
under advisement and thinking about them, about
number two.
So with that, I will pass on to Michael Olson.
Member Olson: All right, very similar comments to
what we have already heard. Number one, there is
just too many lines there going in the same
direction. Big or small rendering, I don't think that
is a very appealing design.
Number two, at this point, would be my preference.
The one thing I did notice on this design, Gary had
mentioned the fact that this mountain doesn't look
much like a mountain in this view. The other thing
that I noticed was it is very symmetrical. There is

18
three trees on each side. Maybe that is, if there was
a picture taken and that is what it looks like, I guess
that is one thing, but that would be something that
may want to be revisited if this one is the one that
is selected to maybe throw it off a little bit. It is
nature. There is not a lot in nature that is perfectly
symmetrical.
The number three, the deer look like they are
posing for a picture on a family vacation. It doesn't
look natural. Somewhat of an appealing design but
as has been stated, the deer would be awful small
on there and it may be difficult to replicate.
Number four, I think that one, the fact that we are
talking about White Mountain and we see just a
little blip of something behind the bird, doesn't
really cut it for me. If that bird was specific to that
area only, I think it might be a nice design to work
with. But since it is not, I guess I am not sure how
it would portray the mountain with that design. So I
would not be in favor of that one.
Again here, I don't know who was taking the
pictures, whether the moose was taking pictures of
the deer or the deer of the moose first. But he looks
like he is taking his turn with a portrait. Maybe on
some of these designs where we have got animals, I
guess I would prefer they are not looking directly at
the viewer, maybe off to the side so it looks a little
more natural.
My support primarily will be going for design
number two. That's it.
Chair Marks: Michael Bugeja.
Member Bugeja: I have a quick question I would
like to direct to Don real quickly.
When the designs are conceived, what kind of
canvas do the artists use?
Mr. Everhart: Well, we are given a format which has
the copy on it, like in this case White Mountain and

19
the date and everything but it is at still the eightinch diameter.
Member
canvas.

Bugeja:

It

is

an

eight-inch

diameter

Mr. Everhart: It is the same size we sculpt them at.
Member Bugeja: Well one of the things I do on the
quarter designs is to reduce the image to quarter
size. And that led me to think of art history and
Victorian miniatures and how did they depict
scenes.
One of the questions that I ask whenever I look at
the legislation is what is the conventional medium
for the image or icon in the legislation. And the
conventional medium for White Mountain would be
the postcard. All right? And that is a very different
kind of canvas than the coin.
So I had some fundamental questions. I mean,
quickly I am going to go through these but then I
wanted to bring up some of the means of my
critique. In other words, to give you an idea of why
I am making the comments that I am making, with
a little bit of theory behind it.
I agree that number one is way too busy. If you
reduce that to a 25-cent coin, it almost looks like
grass. So you lose the tree image.
On number two, I have much of the same feeling. It
is a little bit better. There is good orientation in
terms of this being a little higher elevated angle.
Number three with the deer, way too busy. I didn't - again, the trees and the mountain, too many
layers as Heidi said.
Number four, I actually like. The tree in the
background behind the bird I think is a distraction. I
wondered why it was there and whether it was
needed.
And then we have what looks like a Canadian coin

20
on number five.
But I wanted to give at least the designers and the
artists just a little bit of how I came to something,
what I look for in the design. The first I look for is
what is the icon. Is there a symbol there that is
really representative of the image. The second is a
fundamental question I ask is, what is the
conventional medium where this type of an image
would be depicted? And because the legislation is
America the Beautiful, the parks, we are going to
come back to the postcard often.
In addition to that, I look for orientation. And the
orientation on all but four is straight on, six-foot tall
photography. In other words, a six-foot person with
a camera taking straight-on pictures. And what I do
sometimes is try to elevate to use software to see
how that would look at different types of
orientation,
which
every
artist
and
every
photographer actually take into account.
The next I look for is contrast and relief in the
numismatic world. And I think Gary handled that
quite cogently when he talked about the proof and
the frosted images. If I got rid of that tree on
number four, I think the frosted image of the bird
would be okay.
I also look for sensory data. Most of the coins that I
see are quiet. And sensory data is -- the five sense
-- There are six senses. The five senses, taste,
smell, sight, all of those, but there is also
movement as the sixth sense.
Now when I take a look at all the coins they are
static but number four actually has the implied
sensory datum of sound, which I find appealing.
So I just wanted to give the designers a little bit of
how I look at things but given all of that, my
preference would be four, with a possible
elimination or at least reduction of the tree
immediately behind the bird.

21
Chair Marks: Okay. With that, we will go to Mike.
I'm sorry, Erik Jansen.
Member Jansen: Thanks. The benefit of being last,
you can thank everyone for helping me frame my
own choice here.
And thanks, Heidi, for the sculptors' take on this. I
think sometimes that is the hardest part for me is to
know exactly how this gets reduced to relief and the
proof consequences and so forth.
I am going to focus on the two that have my
attention right now and that is number two and
number five. I had originally come here and voted
for number one but I think it is too busy and I think
the comments are right on in that regard. It is going
to be interesting with the CFA's recommendation
there versus what I think will be something different
from us from what I have heard from everyone
here. And it doesn't sound very consensual at this
point from us either.
I call number two kind of my default choice because
of the deer comments and the bird is not getting my
attention as is because it is kind of complex and so
forth. So I take two as a default choice because
number one is too busy. I think it will coin up well.
The proof surfaces are good. The mountain will be
good in relief.
I had an interesting thing happen to me when the
moose first came to my attention as I was reviewing
these, I kind of said, moose? Now, I have never
been to White Mountain. I have been to most of the
national parks west of the Mississippi, several of
them east. But I know a moose and the sixth sense
here is called swampy because that is what moose
are. They are swampy and they do stand there just
like that when they see you.
So I am pushed over the line on number five
because I talked to a couple of locals that actually
went to school at Dartmouth and they immediately
said oh, it's the moose. It's the moose.

22
So I am going to yield the benefit of the doubt to
local knowledge and say I am going to vote for
number five and back it up with number two. Thank
you.
Chair Marks: Thank you, Erik. And we will move
now down to Michael Moran.
Member Moran: My first time in the box. At the risk
of being cute, I think number one, you can't see the
forest for the trees.
I do like number two. I would word it this way: that
is nicely framed. I wish there were five trees instead
of six because odd numbers are better. But still, it
will coin well.
Three is a mess. It's too busy. For me, four had
potential. The problem is it is not recognizable as a
bird distinctly to somebody that is not an
ornithologist or knows the nature of the area.
As to five, I do like the moose. Being from the
south, they are an unusual animal to us. When I
think of a moose, I don't think of the West. I think
specifically of Maine and it hits right on for me.
So I'm like Erik. I am going to split my votes
between two and five.
Chair Marks: Okay with that, is Doreen on the
phone? No. Okay.
I will ask the committee members to register their
tallies on the scoring sheet that was passed out to
you ahead of the meeting for White Mountain. And
at this point, I am going to look back to Ron for our
next quarter.
Mr. Harrigal: Okay, the next design we are looking
at is Perry's Victory and International Peace
Memorial. Established as a federal site in 1919, this
memorial was built to honor those who fought in the
Battle of Lake Erie during the War of 1812. Equally,
the memorial is a symbol to the long-lasting peace

23
between Great Britain, Canada and the United
States.
The memorial is one of the tallest of its kind in the
United States, rising 352 feet above western Lake
Erie and is often described as a dominant feature of
the Lake Erie islands. The Doric column at Perry's
Victory
and
International
Peace
Memorial
constructed of 2,340 granite blocks each weighing
between two and five tons is the only International
Peace Memorial in the Park Service and stands 47
feet taller than the Statute of Liberty in New York
Harbor.
The top of the memorial features an 11-ton bronze
urn and is an observation deck for visitors. An
elevator takes visitors to the open-air 360 degree
observation platform.
At the center of the base of the massive column is a
rotunda, a round room, and below the rotunda floor
are six bodies buried from the Battle of Lake Erie,
three Americans and three British officers.
Hold on a second. I have got a little technical
difficulty here. I opened the box. I need to close it
out. I don't know why these pop-up boxes keep on
coming up.
All right. Design number one. The design depicts a
statue of Master Commandant Oliver Hazard Perry
located in the visitor's center of Perry's Victory in
the International Peace Memorial. At the age of 27,
Perry led American forces in the naval victory of the
Battle of Lake Erie, receiving a Congressional Gold
Medal and the thanks of Congress. It was Perry who
coined the famous quote, we have met the enemy
and they are ours, after defeat of the British
squadron.
Okay, second design. This design was inspired by
three flags flown at the memorial. This design uses
artistic license to capture the essence of the three
nations bonded together in lasting peace.

24
Design three. This design represents three flags
shown at the memorial. When standing near the
northern seawall looking towards the memorial
south, the American flag is on the left, closest to the
memorial, and the Canadian flag in the middle, the
British flag on the right.
So there are three candidates to consider.
Chair Marks: Okay,
questions for staff?

are

there

any

technical

Member Wastweet: I have a question. How did we
end up with only three designs for this one?
Mr. Harrigal: Well we started out with more. When it
came down to it, these are the three that we
actually -- made it through the gauntlet of the
reviews, the clearance materials and actually to the
final round. We start out with a lot more.
Member Wastweet: But on the -Mr. Harrigal: I can't really give you specifics on the
what happened and those sort of things.
Member Wastweet: Right.
Mr. Harrigal: But clearly, we have the memorial
here and that is the centerpiece of what the park
wanted us to focus on.
Member Wastweet: Okay.
Chair Marks: Any other technical questions? Okay,
hearing none, I am going to go ahead and start this
one.
I think we have one choice here. And I think we
have one choice because I truly believe it would be
in error for us to recommend a coin that would have
the image of a foreign nation's flag on it. Both
Canada and Britain of course are good friends of the
United States but still, there is just something -- I
think there would be some criticism. I know that
these flags, we just heard these flags, exist at the

25
memorial. They are a part of the memorial. I get
that. I understand that. But I still think that for
those who are sensitive to such things, which I think
are a significant part of our population, that when
presented with a coin with the flag of a foreign
nation on it, it is going to be a problem.
So I will urge you all to consider that designs two
and three not be our recommendation. And because
we have only been given three options here, that
means there is only one left to pick.
Number one of Commandant Perry, I am looking for
what I can say about it.
(Laughter.)
Chair Marks: I'm sorry. I didn't mean it to come out
that way. The Commandant was, I think, the focal
point of this battle. That is what I am understanding
from our presentation. So if we look for an iconic
image like I have talked about and others have
talked about, it is probably a good subject to put
the Commandant's likeness on this coin.
At the same time, I am back to my issue of layers
and pop. I think the stuff around it, the window
framing and the walls on either side, while I know
that is part of that environment there, I just wish
that we could have found a way maybe to show this
image without all the window dressing, if you will.
How do you like that one?
Mr. Harrigal: That's great. In keeping with the
metaphor.
Chair Marks: So with that I think we have once
choice and it is number one. And I think this time
we will go to my friend Michael Olson and we will
move down to Erik Jansen and then we will move
over to Heidi and down to Donald. So, Mike.
Mr. Harrigal: Gary, can I interject just one comment
here from the site?

26
That statue is actually designed to be displayed
outdoors and it was for a period of time. So by
removing -- if the recommendation is to remove the
window and the building around it, it would still be
specific to the memorial and actually the Park would
be okay with that.
Chair Marks: Okay. I think it would give it more
pop.
Mr. Harrigal: But anyway, I want to hear your
recommendations.
Chair Marks: Yes, you would give it more gravitas. I
mean when you look at it, just seeing that image of
that sculpture by itself, especially on a proof version
I think would be certainly more spectacular than
what we would have with this image.
Mr. Harrigal: Yes, the actual statue was donated in
1929 and remained outdoors until 1990.
Chair Marks: Okay.
Mr. Harrigal: So it was a substantial period of time.
Chair Marks: Okay, thank you. And maybe it is a
matter of artistic license to move it out of the
building again but it is the image we want to look
at. It is not all the window dressing around it.
So, Mike.
Member Olson: I echo Gary's comments. I do want
to ask a question. I guess I don't want to assume
this but did we send anybody up there to this
memorial to take a look at it in person or did we get
the pictures?
Mr. Harrigal: We did not, no.
Member Olson: The question I have here, I am
totally against the fact that we'd have the two other
nations' flags on there. Obviously they are good
allies of ours, but we did win the battle. And the
question I have, I believe it is customary for the

27
American flag to fly higher than flags of any other
nation, if it is displayed on a U.S. property. And
here we see it on par with the other two nations. I
am totally in disagreement with that.
Mr. Weinman: As a point of clarification, this is
actually the way the statute reads as to how flags of
other countries should be displayed.
Member Olson: What is?
Mr. Weinman: Actually they are at the same level,
equal height. It is in the statute. That is the
protocol. It is portrayed in accordance with the
proper protocol.
Member Olson: Okay. But given that fact, I still
think we should be honoring the American hero and
as Gary has stated, there is really only one that
does that. I don't have as big a problem with the
framing around it. I think that that does provide
some unique perspective, which we have been
asking for. You are in that enclosure and you are
looking out and you can see the monument behind
it. I guess I don't really have a real big problem
with that design. Out of the three that were given,
that would be the one that would be getting my
support. That's it.
Chair Marks: Before we move on to Michael Bugeja,
maybe I missed it but what selection did the CFA
make?
Mr. Harrigal: They made no selection on this one.
Chair Marks: No selection.
Mr. Harrigal: Correct.
Chair Marks: That's why I didn't hear one.
Mr. Harrigal: I'm sorry. I should have mentioned
that, Gary.
Member Bugeja: Just to correct the record, England
is an ally and friend of us by default of two wars. I

28
speak as a French Maltese person, just to clarify
that record. And also that Canada still has the
Queen's image and we don't.
Okay, I cannot approve of two and three as Gary
has stated and for all those reasons. I think number
one has the problem of the window bars. You
reduce that to a quarter size and it could almost get
a 3-D effect of those bars being a prison.
The thing about this is when you take a look at the
monument, which is so tall and so distinct, we are
dealing again with orientation. If the goal was to
show the height of the monument, then number
three has a little bit of that orientation in it. We
talked about sensory data -- I talked about sensory
data the last time. We always see movement when
we see a flag. When we see a tree, it is always
static. And wind also is one of those sensory data
that can be incorporated in a coin. But, again,
because two and three have issues, I am going to
not recommend those.
If you eliminated the indoor aspect of number one,
there is still an orientation problem with the statue
being so much more in focus and in height than the
monument. I think I am going to leave my
comments there, rather than be too critical. I
understand the situation of this particular scene.
There is, however, I think in the battle, Perry's ship,
his flagship, sinks, if I am not mistaken, and then
rather than lower his colors, which would be the
flag, he got into a boat and went to another ship
and defeated the British. Am I right on this history,
anyone? I think he got into a rowboat. I mean, he is
really heroic. In many ways, I would like to see that
heroism displayed.
Again, Canada and England are our allies by default.
We fought them. This was a battle that we won
against them. It wasn't World War II over London.
And if we want to depict history on the coin, we
need to do it accurately.

29
Chair Marks: Erik.
Member Jansen: I completely lost the sensitivity on
the flags. So, Gary, thank you for correcting my
deficiency there.
So if I look at one, two comments here. First of all, I
am going to defer to my expert on being a sculptor,
and that is Heidi, having a discussion perhaps with
the Mint on how to manage the depth and so forth
here.
I look at how this particular design coins up in the
lower right-hand corner, and I am less concerned
about the tower disappearing than I am the bars
turning into some kind of a jail or what the heck are
those.
And so my second point would be really a question,
Gary and the Mint, is it kosher to go back to the
artist and say, well, we like the concept, but we
don't like the windows?
Chair Marks: Just as a matter of practice from the
past, the committee has approved motions following
our tallies where we take our selected or our
recommended design and we might make a motion
to recommend some sort of change to it.
Beyond that, it is really up to the Mint whether or
not they follow through on that. But I would suggest
in this case being three images and at least in my
opinion only one we consider that if number one is
chosen, that we will -- in fact, lacking any other
motion, I will make a motion as chair to recommend
some change to number one.
Member Jansen: I think not that it is our job to
handle the relationship between the Mint or the CFA
or whether it is even appropriate for us to discuss
the issue, I do think it is important that we try to
raise the utility of this committee to the Mint and to
the Secretary of the Treasury as high as possible.
And in that sense, give them some direction here.
And if that direction includes a subjective motion

30
that you just described, Gary, I would encourage
everyone on this committee to support design
number three on that basis.
Chair Marks: Three?
Member Jansen: I'm sorry. Design number one.
Chair Marks: Okay, thank you.
Member Jansen: Just seeing if you are with me.
Chair Marks: We will circle over to Heidi.
Member Wastweet: Obviously we have no interest
in two or three so I won't even talk about those.
And on design number one, before we, again, miss
the forest for the trees, I would like to pull back and
remind us that we are working on a series called
America the Beautiful, talking about national parks.
And this coin here looks to me like an historic battle
coin. I don't understand. And maybe we can get an
answer of why it says Perry's Victory instead of
Perry's Victory and International Peace Memorial.
Mr. Harrigal: Basically we have to -- we only have
so much space to put on the coin. We do an
abbreviated description of what the park is on the
top. So we really can't put the whole inscription on
it.
Member Wastweet: It seems like there is enough
space that we could fit this in somehow. Because
just to simply say Perry's victory is going to be very
confusing to the public. Unless you are in that
region and you know of this park, then it will make
sense, but a lot of America is not familiar with this
park. It is not part of the everyday language like
Yellowstone Park may be. And part of the purpose
of this program is to educate the public on our rich
land system. And I don't think this coin does that at
all.
So before we start talking about taking out windows
and the height of the monument and the statue, I

31
think we are missing the mark altogether. I would
recommend rejecting all as in alignment with the
CFA.
Chair Marks: Okay, we will move to Mr. Moran.
Member Moran: Well I think the engraving staff is
taking a lot of heat. At the same time, I have been
to Put-in-Bay. There is not a lot there. And when
you look at it from that perspective, you did as well
as you could.
I for one agree about the flag comments,
particularly number two. It is in your face.
I will say some positive things about number three.
I think that the artist, the designer, engraver there,
did finesse the issue of the flags in that the
American flag is out front. The others are not as
recognizable. And the perspective he gave the
whole affair there is good in that the American flag
appears above the others, even though we know it
is not. And in that regard -- and it's simple. It really
meets a lot of the criteria other than the fact that I
think we are all going to come down to the point of
foreign flags on our coins don't get it.
Number one, it is a mess. Again, we can't do that.
You can't put the windowpanes in there. It is going
to look like a prison cell. If you take the
windowpanes out, you have another issue there.
And that is, you have got the memorial in the
background and you give it the same relief as you
do Perry, they are going to conflict with each other.
The way you fix that, and I don't know if the Mint is
willing to do that, is you put Perry in high relief and
you put the memorial in the lower relief in the
background and it clearly won't conflict and it will
balance out. But short of that, number one doesn't
work either.
Chair Marks: Okay. Heidi, can you tutor us a little
bit on that comment about relief? Would that work?

32
Member Wastweet: Yes. And I realize that my
comments didn't offer any positive criticism as far
as a solution, so let's talk about that for a minute.
The quarter is extremely shallow. The only way that
we could accommodate Mike's suggestion of low
relief/high relief is if the monument were simply a
silhouette, and that is possible.
If you take away the windows alone, the
composition isn't going to work the same. So just by
us asking to take out the windows I think is not
enough to make this design work. If they want to go
back to the drawing board and rearrange the
elements and consider doing a silhouette of the
monument in the background, it could work. But I
don't think it is enough for us to just say take out
the structure.
Chair Marks: I will offer that if I end up making the
motion, it is just going to be isolate the sculpture.
But we will have that discussion here in just a
moment.
Member Wastweet: Yes. And actually on number
two, number two could work if we just took out the
flags. The water was really an important part of the
battle and of the park. It is a key element. So it is
nice that number two shows the water, as well as
the landmark monument. So that is another option.
Mr. Everhart: Can I make a comment?
Chair Marks: Yes, please.
Mr. Everhart: On number one, if we do take out the
windows, the relationship between the monument
and the sculpture would have to change. You would
have a lot of negative space on the left, which I
think you would have to shift the position of the
monument.
(Simultaneous speaking.)
Member Wastweet: I agree.

33
Mr. Everhart: And I do think that we can show a
difference in the relief, not only with the height of
relief, but with the amount of detail that is put into
it. So I think we can show that there is a spatial
relationship on one.
Chair Marks: Okay, thank you. That is helpful.
Thank you.
Member Jansen: Gary?
Chair Marks: Well, let's let -- hold your thought just
for a minute. I want to get Don on the record here.
So, Don, go ahead.
Member Scarinci: You know, Heidi, I think you
didn't have much positive to say about these
designs because there isn't anything positive that
could be said about these designs. So let's just
establish that you need to -- you blew it on this
one. And, you know, you can only now try to
resurrect it by doing something with one of these
designs, and design one seems to have the most
support, including mine that you could do
something with.
So, you know, with some motion, you know, I will
give number one a one as a vote. You know, but I
don't want that to be misinterpreted as any
acceptance that these are the kinds of designs that
we really want to see. As far as I am concerned,
this kind of -- this is part of the United States Mint's
past. And it is part of the United States Mint's preJanuary 8, 2010 past -- 2011 past. Okay?
So I hope we don't really have to do much more of
this and see much more of this. And I am hopeful
that, you know, we'll soon not and we will soon see
more creative things.
The concept of only giving us three designs, that is
also part of the United States Mint's pre-January 8,
2011 past. All right? For us to look at three designs
and for the CFA to look at three designs and pick
one among three where two of them are just

34
variations on a theme is insulting. That has been
said before. That has been said when we had the
Medal of Honor coin designs where we were
presented with relief versions and said okay here,
we have to decide. Well we are not deciding
anything. So here, we are not really deciding
anything.
But be that as it may, you know, let's just move
forward and do things better, and let's just
acknowledge and just accept that this is not the
kind of thing that we want to see. This is definitely
not -- there is nothing artistic here. And if any
constituent group thinks that this is good, they
obviously think this is good because they are only
shown bad things. You know, because nobody could
think any of these designs are good. All right? I
mean, nobody, unless they are only shown bad
things.
So I think that the other thing that I would want to
-- I just want to state my position on flags, I don't
have a problem with flags. The world is flat. This is
2011. America is in a new position in the world, a
different position in the world. I have no problem
depicting the flags of other nations, the brotherhood
of nations, and working -- anything that indicates
that we as a nation are acknowledging that we are
living in a world community. I see nothing wrong
with that in 2011.
So you know,
wouldn't want
agree with
Congress said
Greg.

just to put that on the record. So I
to not see other flags. No problem. I
Congress, obviously. You know,
that. Thank you for clarifying that,

So the only thing, you know, I mean I guess
procedurally, Mr. Chairman, you know, the only
question would be how do you want to craft it so
that at least we could give, if there is a consensus
on it, at least we could give coin number one some
vote today. Because as it is, you can't vote for the
guy behind bars, you know, the guy in front of the

35
bars. This is just horrific. So how do we make it so
that we can make some lemonade out of this?
Chair Marks: I would suggest we go ahead with our
traditional scoring and then after we see what the
result of that is, then we can make some consensus
decisions about where we go from there.
Member Scarinci: Okay. And just please, in the
future, you know, let's -- bad taste, keep it from us,
please.
Chair Marks: Okay. With that, I will ask the
members to tally their scores on their sheets. And I
will just note -Member Moran: Gary, can I interrupt you for a
second?
Chair Marks: Yes.
Member Moran: Are we discarding Heidi's
suggestion to just drop the flag concept on number
two totally? It is mediocre. I understand that.
Member Jansen: Yes, that was the comment I was
going to make was just to elevate Heidi's thought -and put her before every time, will you? That way it
is much easier for me. Elevate Heidi's thought of
taking design number two and with removing the
flags you have, I think, a self-balancing design
which could suffice.
Now we could be criticized for just republishing, is it
the Maine State Quarter that has got a lighthouse
on a point, if my visual memory serves me well.
Because Perry's Victory, I don't know, it must be a
lighthouse.
Chair Marks: Yes, there is a lot of worms in that
can. When you take the flags away, what are you
left with?
Member Jansen: I am trying to salvage here.
Chair Marks: Let your imagination wander on that

36
one for a moment.
Member Bugeja: I do have a comment along that
line, too, based on number two. I am not
advocating number two, but that is a perfect
example of taking a look at the medium from an
artist's viewpoint. It is straight-on. What would be
the orientation to lower our view and look up at that
monument and still get a glimpse of the water? A
photographer, for instance, would not take that
straight-on view, would probably bend down and
get the water and the monument.
And also there is something neat about the proof
design on these quarters. Proof can actually turn a
daytime scene into a nighttime scene. And to
understand the medium and how it affects
traditional art is, I think, my obligation as coming
from a coin perspective. Michael Olson just passed a
picture of parks at night with lighting. You can effect
that with a proof because the proof would show the
sky at night.
So I just wanted to make those comments, not that
I am advocating for number two, but without the
flags, it would be an interesting proof design.
Chair Marks: Okay. With that, we really need to
move on. Given the schedule we have put together
here, we have three more quarters to go through. If
we spend ten minutes a piece on those and knowing
we are going to have to have some substantial
discussion at the end, maybe 20 minutes, that is
what we are under if we want to stay on schedule,
and we have got two other programs to look at.
So I am going to ask us, as I have done in the past
for these next three quarters, I want a good
discussion but I am going to ask us not to be
duplicative of each other and to just be concise in
your comments. Otherwise, we are going to get way
behind the day.
So with that, I am going to go ahead and recognize
Ron to present the images for the next quarter.

37
Mr. Harrigal: Okay, thank you, Gary. The next
quarter is Great Basin National Park. First
established as a national site in 1922, Great Basin
National Park is located entirely in Nevada.
However, the Park takes its name from the Great
Basin, which stretches from California's Sierra
Nevada Range on the west to the Wasatch
Mountains of Utah in the east. From the sage brush
at its base to its 13,063-foot summit of Wheeler
Peak, the Park includes streams, lakes, alpine
plants, abundant wildlife, and a variety of forest
types, including groves of ancient bristlecone pines
and numerous limestone caverns, including the
beautiful Lehman Caverns. The Park also lays claim
to one of the best views of the nighttime sky in the
country.
So I will move on to the designs. Design one depicts
the beauty of the unique qualities of the single
bristlecone pine tree. It shows the rocky glacial
moraines, which a tree grows on. These trees grow
at an 11,000-foot elevation in the Park. According
to the National Park Service, bristlecone pines are
true masters of longevity. They endure not
centuries but millennia.
The bristlecone pine found on Wheeler Peak was
determined to be the world's oldest tree, 4,950
years of age. And the only other Park that has this
exact species can be found in Bryce Canyon
National Park in Utah.
Design two depicts the features of the bristlecone
pine framing Wheeler Peak cirque carved by
glaciers. The image of the cirque is unique and
iconic, visible to visitors from many perspectives.
Wheeler Peak stands at 13,063 feet.
Design three, the design features the bristlecone
pine, its unique trunk system, and the Wheeler Peak
cirque, represented here with more panoramic
views of the mountain peaks.
And design four, the design represents the
reintroduction of the bighorn sheep to the Great

38
Basin National Park. It is one of the largest
mammals present in the area. It features the
bristlecone pine tree as well. Both are found at
higher elevations in the Park. The bighorn sheep
was reintroduced to the Park in 1979 and 1980.
So we have the four candidates for Great Basin
national Park.
Chair Marks: Okay. Quickly, do we have any
technical questions?
Member Olson: I have one. On number one, is that
the exact tree, the 4,000-year-old tree?
Mr. Harrigal: It is not. It is a representative tree.
Chair Marks: Okay. With that, I am going to go
ahead and start with Don this time. Don?
Member Scarinci: Among the four designs, and I
wish there were more than four designs, but among
the four designs, I am inclined to support design
number two, simply because I think you are at least
close to doing something somewhat artistic. And
you know, having the tree blend in with the texture
of the rock and circle the edge of the coin is I think
you are at least in the right church with something
that might be competitive with other coins of the
world that really are artistic. So you know, number
two gets the most honorable mention.
Number four, I just can't even comment on it. I
mean, it is just comical. I can't even believe you
sent it to us. But I really can't even have any good
criticism about it because it is something that you
would see in grammar school.
Anyway, in the interest of time that says enough.
Four designs bad. Four designs. I don't want to see
four designs. You are not paying for us to come
here to see three designs and four designs. That is
the past.
Mr. Harrigal: Gary I would like to make one

39
interjection here.
Chair Marks: Yes.
Mr. Harrigal: The CFA did recommend design one on
this series.
Chair Marks: Okay, thank you. Understood.
Michael Moran.
Member Moran: I disagree with Don in a couple of
respects, but only a couple.
First of all on number one, that reminds me of a
Birger Sandzen, and I hope I pronounced that right,
woodblock. I think it will coin well. I think it will look
good. It is simple. It conveys the message of the
Great Basin.
From there, it goes downhill for me in that they're
not -- particularly number two is not distinct enough
to recognize. Number three is too busy. And number
four I do have a problem with they reintroduced
sheep there. They call them park pets out west and
I just can't get past that, personally.
So my vote is number one.
Chair Marks: Heidi?
Member Wastweet: Of all the designs we are looking
at today, I think number one in this group is my
favorite of all the ones that we are looking at. I like
this design very much. It has a lot going for it that
we have been asking for. It is simple. It has focus.
It has texture. It has interesting negative spaces
that are going to look great on the polished proofers
and on the business strike.
I cautious the sculptures to organize the greenery
so that it doesn't become just a mass of abstract
texture as it is drawn and the sculptors could fix
that under the guidance of our trusty Don Everhart.
I like this design very much.

40
Number two, I feel looks like a frame without a
picture. There is nothing in the middle. There is no
focus. It looks like there should be something in the
middle.
And, Ron, what would you feel about this as far as
metal flow? Would you get ghosting in the middle
there?
Mr. Harrigal: Typically that is where it would show
up if it did. And we would have to, we would
definitely have to adjust the relief in the Basin on
this one in particular.
Member Wastweet: So it
technical concerns, possibly.

would

cause

some

Mr. Harrigal: There is higher risk of it on this coin
than others, definitely.
When you look at coins like on the Wright Brothers
or if you look at the Jamestown coins that we did in
the past, where you have space like that, it almost
looks like a silhouette of a sun. Sometimes it shows
up in there. But it is basically the center of metal
flow and you do get a texture difference sometimes
there.
Member Wastweet: Thank you.
Number three, I could go with this one if it were
sculpted correctly. What we are seeing in some of
the quarters that are coming out is too much
texture between the background and the foreground
and it all blends together. This is drawn nicely so
that the background is softer. While it has some
merit, I am still preferencing number one.
Number four, this looks like just cut and pasted
together. I can't get behind this one. I'm going to
stick with number one as my preference. Thank
you.
Chair Marks: Okay, we'll go down to Erik.
Member Jansen: I would agree and go with number

41
one. Each of the other three kind of coins up as a
viny thing from nine o'clock around to six o'clock or
more.
And I would be fearful
foliage actually ends
Monterey cypress than
West Coaster so I guess

on number three that the
up looking more like a
a bristlecone pine. I am a
I am familiar with that.

And number three is just too busy, I think. So I will
echo Heidi's thoughts and go with number one
exclusively.
Chair Marks: Okay. Michael?
Member Bugeja: I like number one as well. There is
a perfect example of in proof the difference between
the mint state and the proof state. The mint state
would be daytime and the proof state would be
nighttime. And that is just really lovely. I love the
cropping of number one. I think that is very good.
I do want to make some brief comments on the
other three. While -- I mean I like the texture, the
three different types of texture you have in number
two. Now remember that texture is touch and that
hobbyists touch coins and feel them and like them
and you have three different types of textures with
the leafs, the trunk, and the mountain.
I am not saying I like that. I like number one far
more than I like number two, but that has some
things to speak about it.
I think the background conflicts with the foreground
in number three. And the vine at first blush when I
looked at it, almost comes off as a bird on the
bottom if you take a look at it.
Now I want to say something about number four. It
is cut and paste, but from an artistic vantage point,
there is a conceit between the ram's horns and the
trees' gnarling shapes. And I think that if we didn't
have the cut and paste type of design here,
something really interest could have been done with

42
the horn and that limb.
Okay, those are my comments.
Chair Marks: Michael Olson.
Member Olson: Real brief here.
Number one I thought was very appealing. It is a
very unique looking tree. I think it would work well
in proof. It is not a cluttered design. In the
foreground there, it has got some random stones.
That plant or tree is pretty much specific to that
area, so I think it is a good representation.
Two, the fact that it looks like a frame with nothing
in the middle is just not that appealing to me. Three
is too cluttered. And number four is just a version of
two with a clipart sheet inserted.
So I will be giving three points to number one. I
think it is a very nice design.
Chair Marks: Okay, I think first what I want to say
is that as we make our comments today, and some
of them are a little on the harsh side, I want the
artists to know, the engravers to know, that I
understand that a lot of what you produce, you are
pretty much directed what to produce. And so as we
look at these images today, I really hope that some
of the harshness isn't taken too personally because
you are part of a process that has generated these
designs and oftentimes you are just following
direction. And we know that there is a design and a
plan to change that process and in fact, it is
underway as far as implementation goes. So I don't
want our comments to be taken as a direct offense
at the artist. They are part of the process that
produced this.
And from the point of view of rendering the objects
they have rendered, they have done a wonderful
job. Okay? It is about composition. It is about the
specific themes that they are given to work with. It
is about not being able to visit sites and really take

43
in the environment and with the sensitivity of an
artist then to be able to interpret that back in a
design. That doesn't happen right now. And that is
not the fault of the artists. Okay?
So I just want that to be on the record that we have
got a great group of very artistic, very talented folks
that work for the U.S. Mint. And I believe that as
the process changes, they are going to have more
liberty, more freedom to express artistically the
kinds of things that we are looking for.
So with that, I am only going to make one comment
because I really don't know what, if anything, that I
will support. I happen to really love the bighorn
sheep. When I lived up near Glacier National Park, I
was privileged to be able to see this majestic animal
many, many times. They would walk right by you. It
is just a wonderful, unique animal. I wished that we
would have been given an image that would truly
incorporate the bighorn sheep as a focal image in
one of these designs with maybe a suggestion of
gnarled wood. I think that would have been a huge
winner. We don't have that here.
And here again, I would hope that as we move
forward in this process to redesign the process that
our recommendation that the committee's initial
suggestions about themes and narratives might be
taken to heart and actually implemented as part of
these reforms that we are going through so that we
are taking ownership of these designs initially so we
are part of the result when we get to the end.
It is not to micromanage by committee, and I have
heard that come back to me that that might be
what we are trying to do here. It is not. It is about
getting us to take ownership so when we are at this
point, if there is criticisms, we are criticizing
ourselves.
So anyway, time is slipping away from us. So at this
point, I will just ask the members again to fill in
your sheets for the Great Basin National Park, and I

44
will look to Ron to present the next series.
Mr. Harrigal: Thank you, Gary. Let me get to my
correct page.
Okay, the next series is Fort McHenry National
Monument and Historic Shrine. Established as a
national site in 1925, Fort McHenry is a star-shaped
fort best known for its role in the War of 1812. It
was during the bombardment of the Fort that
Francis Scott Key was inspired to write the Star
Spangled Banner, the poem that would eventually
become the national anthem of the United States.
The Fort was named after James McHenry, a ScotsIrish immigrant, and surgeon soldier who became
Secretary of War under President Washington.
All designs are based on modern reenactments.
Design one depicts fife and drums being played
below the Fort's ramparts as the Star Spangled
Banner waves overhead.
Design two, the design depicts a soldier standing
watch in front of a six-pounder field gun as the Star
Spangled Banner waves overhead.
Design three, in this design fifes and drums play the
national anthem as Star Spangled Banner waves
overhead. And design four, in this design troops
march out of the fort as the Star Spangled Banner
waves overhead.
So we have four candidates to present to the
committee for consideration.
Chair Marks: Okay. Any questions?
Mr. Harrigal: Oh, may I also add, Gary, that the CFA
did not make a recommendation on this one.
Chair Marks: Okay, thank you, Ron. Any technical
questions?
Okay, again I am going to ask us to be as brief as
possible, but please give us your opinions. If

45
someone else has stated your point of view on a
particular item, I am going to ask you to kind of just
go with the thought that your colleague offered, but
if you have something new to suggest, please put
that on the record.
With that, let's just start with Michael Bugeja. Are
you ready to start?
Member Bugeja: Yes, I am.
Chair Marks: And then we will move to Erik and
then rotate back.
Member Bugeja: Again, my initial comments earlier
about the canvas of a quarter when depicting a
scene might be appropriate here. So I won't speak
about that again.
Number one has a few elements that conflict with
each other. I worry about the two figures melding
with their hats too closely to the background and
maybe that getting lost on a smaller canvas.
Number two has those elements better defined.
There is some more balance in there.
I love the orientation of number three, where you
have the musicians coming out of the coin. I think
that is very appropriate. I worry about the focal
point being in the middle where there is a platform
and there is an entrance. That focal point right there
is a little too busy for me. Maybe that can be fixed.
On number four, again some of the previous
comments apply. We have good orientation again
with the musicians coming out of a coin. I wondered
whether we needed the fourth musician closest to
the E Pluribus Unum and whether we could shift
those and change the orientation slightly to get the
figures a little bit larger with the effect of coming
out of that coin.
Chair Marks: Okay, Erik?
Mr. Weinman: Mr. Chairman, could I ask a quick

46
point of clarification, only because it has come up
before regarding the size of the quarter? The
program also calls for a three-inch silver version.
And that hasn't come up in conversation so I
wanted to make sure that was on the table.
Chair Marks: That is very true. Thank you.
Member Jansen: I don't think a three-inch version
of these is going to present a major problem. It is
just going to offer the detail that a smaller coin
steals from you.
Let's see here. Number one I am going to end up
recommending a bit out of default. The primary
comment I want to make is echoing what -- maybe
I can beat Heidi here. We have got another kind of
soldier cannon fort quarter here. And in the theme
of the program being beautiful America, maybe
there is another way. I don't know. I have never
been to Fort McHenry personally, although I am
aware that it is a unique space or a unique shape,
rather.
Item number two, the cannon is iconic of a fort.
Fort, cannon, I get it. But it is kind of sad this guy is
having to fight this one all alone. There are no other
cannons lined up or anything. So that is what my
head said is kind of a funny casting of a single
cannon.
Number three, it looks to me like it was a drawing
of a building that they dropped a couple of marching
musicians on top of. When it is coined up, it feels
like the action is somewhere off the edge of the
coin. They cut off the top of the flagpole, which
doesn't kill your eye, but it does kind of tend to
make the story bleed off the edge again.
Number four, my comment, my note was is there an
execution here today because you are leading with
a guy with a sword drawn and it just -- I think it is
an image that maybe is unfortunate because it
doesn't convey necessarily the spirit and the
happiness of the flag and Fort McHenry and what we

47
are trying to convey, at least along that theme line.
So I end up back at number one with something
that works as a default and minor support for the
second one because I think it has the icon on it of a
fort.
Chair Marks: Okay with that, I am just going to mix
this up. I am going to go to Michael Olson.
Member Olson: I have a question. Maybe it is for
Kaarina. This site of this fort was the site of one of
the most heroic defenses in American history at a
very pivotal time in our nation's history. A lot of
blood was spilled to keep that flag flying so Mr.
Francis Scott Key was inspired to write his song,
which is now our national anthem.
Why do we have four designs here that show
soldiers marching around; three that show marching
around playing music; and one guy looking off into
the distance? Was there no thought to possibly
depicting a scene of the defense of that flag or that
fort?
Ms. Budow: There was. I don't know if any of this
was discussed in the admin meeting this morning
prior but there were actually some designs we tried
showing unusual vistas of the walls of the fort, and
we determined that they wouldn't execute. Also, the
actual star fort of Fort McHenry is not unique. It
dates back to I think the mid-15th century Italy.
And also we took into consideration when these
were being developed when we were doing the Star
Spangled Banner commemorative coin, and there
were some criticisms of the actual fort from an
aerial view and the kind of snowflake ornamentslike quality to it. So we also took that into
consideration.
But we really didn't direct the artists. We let them
come up with what they thought were appropriate.
We just gave them the images that the Park told us
were most emblematic of the Park and the Park felt
that these scenes were also very appropriate to

48
represent Fort McHenry.
Member Olson: But I guess the reason Fort McHenry
is an icon for our nation is the battle that took place
there. And I wasn't there, but I would venture a
guess that while that battle was going on they
weren't standing there playing music.
Ms. Budow: Well like I said, these are the images
the Park felt were most appropriate to represent
them. And like I said, we did try some other unusual
perspectives, but we determined that they wouldn't
execute. The artists really did try to stretch
themselves on this particular project.
Member Olson: And I really don't have any problem
with the art. All the pictures look fine. But I think for
a fort of this magnitude and importance, I think
there should have been more focus put on the fact
that there was a very key battle to our nation's
history and longevity that took place there -Ms. Budow: Yes.
Member Olson: -- not people marching around
playing music.
Ms. Budow: I think it is a good point. I think it goes
back to, you know, you think it should be kind of an
historical reenactment, should it be more present
day.
When we were developing again the Star Spangled
Banner, we knew that that coin would be Fort
McHenry of 1814, Battle of Baltimore, and we
thought the quarter for ATB would be more presentday. That was just our line of thinking.
Member Olson: Okay. And I guess -Member Moran: Mike, could I reign you back in a
little bit? It really was a British raiding party. They
came in. They burned Washington and then they
moved on up toward Baltimore, and they were
going to try and do the same thing there. But there

49
wasn't a lot of blood spilled there. Basically the guys
at the Fort hunkered down during the bombardment
and waited because the British didn't have the
firepower to go on and force the issue and go into
the Harbor of Baltimore.
I really see Fort McHenry for two things, the flag
and the Star Spangled Banner. It's as simple as
that.
Member Olson: Well, my comments remain the
same. There was a battle that took place there, and
I can almost guarantee you they weren't playing
music when that battle took place.
So all of these designs are very appealing. I'm sure
that I will pick one that I will favor more than
another, but at this point, I will listen to the rest of
the comments and make that decision.
Chair Marks: I think I will start my comments by
harkening back to a well-known design for all of us,
and that is the Bicentennial Quarter with the
drummer on it. And I think that was a very
successful design and why, it was simplicity. And it
had a drummer, just like we have some drummers
on these. But all you had was the drummer and
then the victory torch with some stars around it.
Very simple. A very simple design. It had more
relief than I think we are going to get on this one,
which helps a lot, but I would have liked to have
seen we are going to talk about the fife and the
drummer, let's focus on a fife and a drummer and
maybe throw the flag in there somehow.
This is a tough one. I mean, does that really
illustrate Fort McHenry then? Maybe. Maybe not.
Now I know that we had some criticisms about the
shape of the Fort with the Star Spangled Banner
program, but that was the Star Spangled Banner
program. That wasn't a Fort McHenry program. Fort
McHenry was an associated icon to the Star
Spangled Banner theme. I think when we're
focusing on a fort, it might have been nice to have a
top-down image of a star, the star being an iconic

50
image in American iconology. Maybe that would be
an image that would have added to simply having
four. Maybe there could have been some creative
way of illustrating the shape of the Fort. While it
may be a common shape in the history of the world,
I'm not sure how many of those types of forts we
had here in our country.
So at that, I am just going to listen to the rest of
you. I'm not quite sure what image to go with at
this point. But I guess it just underlines the point
that our new process needs to happen. Go ahead,
Don.
Mr. Harrigal: I wanted to say one thing, Gary.
Chair Marks: Yes.
Mr. Harrigal: This is one site that the engravers did
go to and take their own photography on, and they
were inspired by the reenactments.
Chair Marks: Okay. But here again I am
understanding that someone ruled out the shape of
the fort just because of our discussion was on a
totally different subject, the Star Spangled Banner.
Here we are talking about the fort, and now we
can't see the fort. So it is just my point if maybe the
committee could have had some ownership from the
beginning to say you know, maybe my colleagues
would disagree with me but we could have had that
dialogue that we didn't have that maybe the shape
of the fort had some significance to a design like
this. Maybe, maybe not. But we never had that
opportunity. There were just some themes
developed internally and now we are to this point.
Mr. Harrigal: I can say that there were literally
dozens of forts of this style in the U.S. I don't know
exactly how many, but I mean, the shape itself is
not unique to Fort McHenry.
Chair Marks: Well you know, there is a lot of
muskets, too, that show up on --

51
Mr. Harrigal: Right.
Chair Marks: -- and a lot of colonial hats that show
up on coins. And we don't decide that we aren't not
going to show muskets or colonial hats. There are a
lot of sailing ships. Lord, we have had lots of sailing
ships on our coins.
Mr. Harrigal: Right.
Chair Marks: The idea that an image has shown up
on our coins before, I don't know if that should
preclude it. But anyway, I am getting a little far
here.
Let's go ahead, Don.
Member Scarinci: This is great for step one, which is
taking the artists out of their cubicles and letting
them breath in the air and environment of the site
that we are asking them to depict. But we are
asking them to depict -- so this is a great -- so just
getting them out of the office and getting them to
the site is outstanding. But what we are asking
them to do is to -- we are asking the artists to be
artists. And you know, you are not going to see this,
you are not going to see any of these designs at
Pulse starting on Thursday in Miami. You are not
going to see any of these designs at the Rack and
Hamper Gallery opening next week in New York
City. You are not going to see any of these designs
at any FIDEM exhibition, you know, that is more
recent than two decades ago. You are not going to
see any of these designs getting nominated for coin
of the year. You are getting a solid depiction of
something. You know, you are getting a photograph
in metal.
And you know, better to get the photograph in
metal from the first-hand encounter with the site,
than to get the photograph in metal from a real
photograph that you are just copying onto metal.
So I encourage going to the site. And I really,
really, really think that is important. You know, but

52
now we have got to go to the next step. And once
the artist goes to the site, experiences the site,
internalizes the site, we have got to let them be
artists and we have got to come up with -- and we
have got to give them time. And we have got to
give them freedom. We have got to give them
space. We have got to give them the connection to
the muse to come up with art.
On these designs, I can pick any one of them. It
does not really matter in my mind. We are picking
between, you know, I am picking between a Kit-Kat
and a Milky Way.
Member Jansen: Donald, I'm trying to practically
envision an approach which lowers everybody's risk.
Okay? Because I haven't seen all the FIDEM stuff. I
hope to. But what I have seen and what I saw Heidi
pull together is kind of quintessential good design,
carries a lot of graphical interpretation, a lot of -and the point here is to reduce risk. And I am
wondering if there couldn't be a message sent out
to the artists in residence or otherwise that consider
as an artist, submit a design on two different paths.
One would be what you view to be a convention of
what you are asked for, a photograph in metal. And
the second one to be, well, out there. And as a
result, we don't end up with a committee that says,
man, this is just really out there. And embarrass the
whole process. That is what I am thinking, Gary, is
how do we minimize risk and create opportunity at
the same time.
Mr. Everhart: You know, let me and I do want to
respond to that. You know, during our committee
deliberations, we actually spent a lot of time on this,
a lot of time on this discussion. And you know, the
way you do that -Look, these people are designing United States
coins. And long after we are all dust, the artists
whose initials are on these coins will be studied for
a thousand years and remembered for a thousand
years. They are immortalized in these designs, just

53
as we study ancient Greek artists in ancient Greek
coins and coinage of other cultures.
So I understand the pressure and the excitement
and the rush of having a United States coin
designed -- you know, having your coin design
become a United States coin. That has to be an
amazing feeling to have that. And I think what we
talked about during our committee discussions is,
you know, don't penalize them. Don't penalize the
artist. Give them two bites. Give them exactly what
you just said. Give them two bites. Instead of telling
them we may only pick one design, well, you know
what, if one of the artists steps out there and
produces art, let's see that. You know, but let's see
that in addition to one of their other designs. Give
them maybe the carrot to do art by saying if this is
really of artistic merit, we are going to submit this
but we are also going to submit the more
conservative one. So if everybody turns up their
nose and doesn't like it other than Scarinci, you
know, you are still not out of the box.
So I think that is something in the way you
restructure, as you restructure. And once you have
an art director who is trained and who doesn't think
Pulse is something that happens at a doctor's office,
you know, once you have that, I think maybe we
will start seeing -- maybe we will start taking this
and go to level two, take it up a notch.
Anyway, thanks for that.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Okay. Moving to Michael
Moran.
Mr. Everhart: You know, Don, I have done a lot of
designs that I thought were out of the box and not
normal looking and it seems like invariably they
never made it to the finish. You know, they just
whether the sponsor didn't like it or whomever,
whether a committee didn't like it. They just never
went anywhere. So I have kind of gotten away from
doing that.

54
Member Scarinci: I know. I know. Don, Crocodile
Rock is art. We can have that. And you can give
that to us, but it has got to get -- you know, what
we referred to in our report, it has got to get past
the Mint censors and get to us somehow. And you
know, and I think we are going to see that happen.
I really am very, very hopeful that we are really
going to see that happening. So that don't penalize
the artist for submitting something that is out there.
And let it get through. It has got to get through. We
have got to see more designs.
Mr. Everhart: On the fort, I had a design which
looked right down on the fort, because I thought it
was unique. When it was reduced, it looked like a
turtle. And I didn't think it was going to -- this
wasn't going to work at that scale so I abandoned it
and I just couldn't make anything work. I tried
different views and everything but it just wasn't
working.
Member Scarinci: Yes, it's tough and certain images
don't lend themselves.
Mr. Everhart: And then we also have to design for
two different scales. Like Greg said, the three-inch
scale and the quarter. And I would assume that the
quarter would get the priority, yet at the same time,
you know, we're selling both of them.
Member Scarinci: Right. And maybe the day will
come soon when there will be an annual art medal
so that some of these designs that are on the
shelves, and some of the things that we have seen
when we visited the Mint in Philadelphia that the
public just never sees, doesn't even know exist,
some of the stuff are treasures. And maybe an
annual art medal, an annual calendar medal of
some sort the Mint will do so that some of these
great designs that never see the light of day can
see the light of day.
Mr. Everhart: The only problem is Congress would
have to authorize that.

55
Member Scarinci: No. No, the Mint Director has the
power to do medals. He has the independent power
to do medals.
Member Moran: Are you ready for me, Gary?
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Yes, Michael, please.
Member Moran: I'm going to be brief. We have
beaten this thing to death. I can live with one. I
think that the engravers need to be careful to pop
the soldiers out against that background. Otherwise,
it doesn't work very well but it does have some
balance. As I said before, when I think of Fort
McHenry, I think of the flag and the national
anthem and that's it, period.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Heidi.
Member Wastweet: I'm in agreement with a lot of
what was already said, even though we have been
told that these are reenactment soldiers, that is not
apparent to anyone who gets this as pocket change
out in the public. They are not going to have that
Cliff Note.
I would get behind design number two if the soldier
were taken out so that we have got the idea that
this is a bit of a ghost town. The soldiers are gone.
This is historic. I would have had the flag flying in
the other direction to take up that base and balance
that out.
So there are some things that could be done. Again,
we shy away from doing art direction from this desk
and this committee. I am frankly not a fan of any of
these. I appreciate that this artists went to the site.
I wish we could have seen some of those other
experimental views. This is a difficult subject and I
give them credit for that, but I am not excited about
any of these.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Okay, thank you, Heidi.
Please make your appropriate

marks on your

56
scoring sheet. And at this point, we are going to
move on to Mount Rushmore. Ron?
Mr. Harrigal: Okay, thank you, Gary.
Okay, Mount Rushmore. Established as a national
site in 1925, Mount Rushmore, the Presidents'
Mountain, is an iconic national memorial. The rock
of Mount Rushmore consists of fine-grain granite
rock and is one of the reasons the location was
chosen for the memorial. It took 14 years to
complete the work, starting on it in 1927.
Okay, basically I think we know what Mount
Rushmore is all about. I am going to move on to the
designs here.
Design one, this design depicts Mount Rushmore
from an aerial perspective, and I also would like to
note that we have done a lot of coins with Mount
Rushmore on it before and they are pretty much of
the traditional view from it. So something like this
was considered a different perspective that we were
looking at. And also the CFA was recommending
design three, once we get there.
The design two, the design was inspired by the
carving of Mount Rushmore. It shows men using
pulleys to reach the areas which they are refining
on President Jefferson's face.
Similarly on number three, this design was inspired
by photos of men adding the final details to finetune Jefferson's face. And this design, the Black
Hills are depicted in the lower left field.
Design four, this design depicts the model located in
the sculptor's studio of Mount Rushmore. The model
was created to depict the final Mount Rushmore
design but insufficient funding forced the carving to
end in October 1941. Originally the plan was to
carve the figures from head to waist.
So we have four candidates to consider for Mount
Rushmore.

57
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Okay. Do we have any
technical questions?
Member Wastweet: I do. On designs three and two,
can you talk to us about the scale of the people to
the sculpture? By my calculations, it looks like
Mount Rushmore is about half its actual size here in
comparison to the size of the people.
Mr. Everhart: I think it was felt that if you actually
did the people at the real scale, they would look like
ants. They would be so small, that you wouldn't
even be able to figure out what they were at this
scale.
Member Wastweet: Yes, I agree with that. I think
they still look like ants.
Mr. Everhart: Artistic license was taken.
Member Wastweet: Okay.
Mr. Harrigal: Heidi, I do have a picture here
showing that scene. So I will share it with you.
Member Wastweet: Okay, thank you.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Okay. Are you done, Heidi?
Any other questions?
Member Bugeja: I have a quick question. Mount
Rushmore coins are going to depend a lot on relief.
Will the relief be tested for contrast on some of
these? For instance on number one we have what
could be a busy background if you don't know the
relief. But if the relief is where the faces come out
of that design, I think that can be actually quite -Mr. Everhart: I think that you can obtain that by
using the technique of putting texture in, which
would probably relate to the chisel marks on the
faces and everything. You could set off that head in
the front by, you know, really showing some texture
on Washington's hair to the left of Jefferson's face.
Member Bugeja: Thank you, Don. That answers my

58
question. Thank you.
Mr. Everhart: Okay.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Any other questions? Okay,
one of our traditions here is that any member can
ask the chair to go first and in this case, Michael
Olson has asked to go first. So I am going to start
with him. Go ahead, Mike.
Member Olson: Thank you. I have been to Mount
Rushmore twice. Once was a long time ago. And the
second time happened to be this past summer. And
there has been a lot of changes over that time.
Major changes to the construction to the large and
very nice visitors' center, which I passed a couple
pictures around. I think the committee has seen
them. I believe Don has them there.
I am going to be honest with you. I was pretty
disappointed with these four choices -- actually
three choices that we have because two of them are
so similar.
Number one, design number one, it is a nice picture
of Mount Rushmore. But my belief is Mount
Rushmore is an iconic monument to our country and
it is meant to be looked up at, not down on. I know
there is a lot of aerial pictures of Mount Rushmore
but when most folks go to see it, they are looking
up. They are looking at four very important
presidents in our country's history.
So number one doesn't really get it for me. Two and
three, I know those are replications of pictures. I
agree with Heidi's comments on the scale. I have
got further issues with those. You know, we
wouldn't probably do a Washington Monument coin
with the monument half done. People are looking at
a Mount Rushmore quarter, they probably would
expect to see the entire monument, not a couple of
faces with spider men hanging down in front of one
of them. But I guess I hope that neither one of
these is the one that is selected.

59
Number four happens to be in a building after you
kind of go up and take a look at Mount Rushmore,
there is a very nice visitor's center and there are
several displays in there similar to this. But that is
not Mount Rushmore. That is sitting inside a
building under a roof. And further, it is not even
what Mount Rushmore looks like. It is what it was
going to look like if it would have been finished. But
it wasn't and the portraits are what we have.
So I would be very disappointed if the design
chosen to depict Mount Rushmore showed a plaster
or whatever type of model that is sitting inside of a
building.
I did bring a couple pictures from our family
vacation, which I have passed around. There is an
avenue of flags, a promenade, if you will, that leads
up to the monument as you walk in with all of the
state flags. And as you are walking up, you have a
full view of Mount Rushmore. And I certainly am
cognizant of the concerns that we didn't want to do
a coin that has already been done two or three
times, but this would have been an excellent
opportunity to send some people out to take a few
pictures, to take a look around. Maybe a view of
Mount Rushmore looking down that avenue of flags,
either at night or during the day. At night they light
it up. There is a very nice nighttime display. And as
Michael Bugeja indicated, it would have been a
great opportunity for a proof coin, maybe a night
view.
With that being said, the only design that is going to
get any vote from me will be number one and it will
be a one. I really wish we could have done
something different with this coin.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Thank you, Mike.
I'm going to go next. I guess I have a question first.
I'm assuming that the artists did not go to
Rushmore.
Mr. Harrigal: That's correct.

60
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Okay.
Mr. Harrigal: Although some of the artists may have
been there on vacation but nobody went specifically
for this.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Sure. I was at Rushmore in
early May and it was a beautiful blue sky day, the
sun was out, and the mountain looked just
spectacular. And when you go there, as Mike has
described, there is this promenade of flags with the
mountain in view and the four faces are very clear.
It is the traditional look of Rushmore that as
Americans we are all very familiar with.
And as you get past the promenade, there is a
couple of layers of an observation deck, a very nice
observation deck, and then there is kind of a
theater thing where they do an evening program.
But had the artists had the chance to go here, they
may have done what I did. And there is a trail that
goes off to the left, a very nice trail, and it goes
down and it takes you in closer to the mountain
itself and the images. And as you approach from
this left side, there are just some wonderful views of
the sculptures but from a different perspective than
we are used to. But you very much understand that
it's Mount Rushmore. It just gives you that different
look and you see all four faces.
And it is too bad. I think that if some of our artists
had been there with this specific assignment, I think
they would have gone down that trail. I think they
probably
would
have
seen
those
different
perspectives, the perspective of a human being on
the ground looking up at these things that any
visitor can go and do.
I think it is important with this coin that we present
our fellow Americans with an image of Mount
Rushmore that they are familiar with. And because
of that, two, three, and four are not images that
they are going to be familiar with. Therefore, I don't
think it really honors -- those do not honor

61
Rushmore for what it should be honored for, and
that is to show it as is, as Americans are used to
seeing it. I'm just suggesting it is too bad we
couldn't have had one of those other perspectives
that would have given us a new look at Rushmore,
especially for those Americans who haven't been
able to visit it.
So I am left with supporting number one because it
is the view that most commonly is going to be
understood by most Americans and I want as a
nation for us to understand what that coin is. So I
am going with number one.
Donald.
Mr. Weinman: Gary, first I'm glad that I wasn't one
of the artists who had to take on this project
because there is a certain intimidation and fear
level. Number one, we have already done coins with
Mount Rushmore. So been there, done that.
Number one does take it from a perspective that we
haven't done and gives you the common image that
people are used to seeing.
And number two, and more important than the fact
that a coin already exists, this is Gutzon Borglum's
work, one of the greatest American artists. You
know, for someone to go back and say, okay, now I
have got to do something with Gutzon Borglum on a
coin, or on another medal, or on another sculpture,
I think that is always -- I would think that would be
an intimidating thing to do.
So I applaud the creativity because Borglum -- you
know, the creativity that the artists are showing
here with two, three, and four is really about
Gutzon Borglum, whose art was process. His art, his
sculpture was process. And I like what they did. I
mean, it's very cool what they did with two, three,
and four. And, you know, I think here we have a
situation where, yes, maybe two and three doesn't
work on the size of the pallette. You know, it might
look cool on the three-incher.

62
But four, is not really all about just something that
is locked up in a room somewhere. Four talks about
the monument, talks about the park, talks about the
sculptor and talks about process and method.
So I think, you know, tough assignment, tough
project because of what this is. I kind of like
depicting, I kind of liked using number four. And if,
you know, just one person asks the question why is
this Mount Rushmore and goes online to find the
answer, they would learn a lot about a great
American sculptor. They would learn a lot about an
American icon and how it came to be.
So, I like number four. I am going to go with
number four for this coin, for the whole educational
aspect of what this series is about.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Michael.
Member Moran: I probably struggled with this one
more than the others. I give the artists credit. They
are out of the box on this with original thinking.
They looked down on Rushmore. They take the
original looks of the actual sculpting of the figures,
and they look at what Borglum originally tried to do.
But I think there are times when you don't need to
be out of the box and this is one of them.
I struggle with number one as to how it will look on
a coin because of all that background and, as Heidi
would say, the texturing. I'm afraid the faces will
get lost. I have seen Jefferson with that half face on
the nickel. It didn't work.
I don't like any of them in that regard. I think we
should have been more traditional.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Okay. Heidi.
Member Wastweet: I don't have a lot to add that
hasn't already been said. Number one is
straightforward. It is, like Michael said, it is a time
when maybe being out of the box isn't necessary.

63
I certainly applaud two and three for trying to be
more creative and give us a different angle. I really
appreciate that. I don't think it is working. I don't
think the scale is -- it doesn't work for me. The fact
that Rushmore is so big is what it is all about. And
even though the men are twice as big as they
should be, they are still going to look like ants. It is
not going to read well.
And two, three, and four all focus on the history of
the site. In this series, I would like to focus on what
the parks are today. If two and three were showing
men cleaning it today, that might be more
interesting to me than the people sculpting it in
history. This isn't a history series. This is about
resources that we have available to us today and
the foresight that our country had in setting those
aside for us.
So I am going to go with the straightforward
number one.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Okay, thank you, Heidi.
At this point, I am going to ask everyone to finish
up their scoring sheets and pass those. I have
asked Erik to be our tally man today, so he is going
to tally these for us.
Michael, you had a comment?
Member Bugeja: I haven't gone yet.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Oh, you didn't?
Member Bugeja: No, I haven't gone yet. I started
and then -CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Oh, I'm sorry. Let's go to
Michael and then we will finish up with Erik.
Member Bugeja: I just want to make some brief
comments. And, again, I am going to try to give a
little bit of theory behind my comments and why I
am making them.

64
Number one, I think Don has helped answer if we
can get relief to show the contrasts or some other
device. I think I can go with one. But again on
orientation, what you are dealing with at Mount
Rushmore is an icon that has been so prevalent in
our memory that it has been satirized. And when
you are dealing with an icon of that nature, it is
always important to try to get another view. So I
was asking, I couldn't quite remember, but I have
not seen a Mount Rushmore where Lincoln is the
focus, looking directly at Lincoln. I have always seen
it from this frontal view. But when you go to these
places, you sort of look for views that you haven't
seen before. So, I mean, if we just turned that
orientation around and looked at Lincoln, I think it
would make people question why are we looking at
Lincoln. Oh, that's a different image.
I don't know -- I know the term is appropriate both
in art and in literature, my background is in
literature, but minimalism in literature means if you
can get rid of something and not have it change the
image or the idea, what would those things be?
So when you take a look at two and three, you can
get rid of, for instance, a couple of the figures, at
least. When you go to three, you don't need the
man on the scaffolding because we can understand
that it's scaffolding. So a part of my problems with
two and three, not only with scale which Heidi has
articulated, but also with kind of a minimalist
approach when you take a look at designs. What
can you get rid of and still convey the same thing? I
think it is an important consideration.
On number four, I think this was very interesting to
me, but again I took Michael Olson's comments into
consideration. It reminded me of the same issue
that -- not issue, it's not an issue -- the same
opportunity that existed with the ram and the
gnarly tree horn. I used the word conceit. For those
who don't know the literary meaning of it, it means
taking two disparate objects that have actually
nothing to do with each other and putting them

65
together so that similarities and sparks could fly.
That ram's horn and that gnarly tree was such.
And when I looked at this, I wondered whether an
artistic license would be how the sculpture should
have been and how it actually is with that in the
background. I'm not saying you can do that with
number four, but the whole idea of thinking with
some theory behind it I think can actually help not
only enhance existing designs but also inform future
ones.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Erik.
Member Jansen: At the risk of being moot as people
may have already scored their sheets, I just want to
stand up and absolutely thank the artists for two
and three. Number three gets my full support. And I
look at three as kind of, well, we did two, that was
kind of the photograph rendered to medal, but there
are a bunch of features that if changed make it
more effective. I get to see Washington's left-facing
profile in number three. I have fewer men dangling
but I don't lose the effect. I have scaffolding in the
background as opposed to the foreground. And I
think, quite frankly, it makes a startling rendering
with a large face just right looking at you. And in
three inches silver, I think this particular piece of
artwork would be stunning.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Okay, thank you, Erik.
Okay, at this point I think I am accurate in asking
you all to finish your sheets, pass those down to
Erik.
We have got about 50 minutes before our scheduled
-- oh no, I'm sorry. We have got about an hour and
15 minutes before our scheduled break for lunch. I
think we have an opportunity here to finish two of
our three programs before we get out to lunch. So
but to do that, we are going to have to mix things
up a little bit.
While Erik is putting the tally together for us, what I

66
want to ask us to do is go ahead and jump forward
in the agenda and look at the platinum coins
because there is only 11 of those images to process
for us, as opposed to the First Spouse, which are 59
images. I don't think there is any way we are going
to get through 59 images before lunch. But if we go
through the 11 on the platinum, then we may even
have time before lunch to circle back and have our
discussion about these America the Beautiful
Quarters and get that taken care of before we all
break.
Are there any objections to that? I'm not hearing
any. I think we are going to go in that way.
I'm going to ask the staff to go ahead and give us
the presentation on the platinum and then go ahead
and have our discussion on that. And then we will
circle back, hopefully before lunch, and will be
informed with the results of the America the
Beautiful tally and maybe there will be -- and I
believe there will be some motions to condition
some of that.
So let's go ahead with that.
Member Scarinci: Gary, just a quick question.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Yes.
Member Scarinci: Are we going to order lunch?
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: My understanding lunch is
on our own.
Member Scarinci: We are not doing lunch? Do you
want to order it? Can we order it in and maybe -CHAIRPERSON MARKS: My understanding was it
was lunch on our own.
Member Scarinci: If we can order it in, I would
rather not lose the time with each other and maybe
-- well, we can pay for our own lunch.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Okay, Greg will get the

67
answer for us. Meanwhile, Ron, can you run through
the platinum for us?
Review and Discuss Candidate Designs for the 2012
Platinum Program
Mr. Harrigal: Certainly. Okay, 2012 American Eagle
Platinum Proof Coin Program. According to 31
U.S.C. 5112(k), the Secretary of the Treasury has
the authority to mint and issue platinum bullion
coins and proof platinum coins in accordance with
such specifications, designs, varieties, qualities -- or
excuse
me,
quantities,
denominations,
and
inscriptions as the Secretary, in the Secretary's
discretion, may prescribe from time to time.
The program began in 1997 depicting the Statute of
Liberty on the obverse and the soaring eagle on the
reverse. And that is the design we use on the
bullion coin. On the proof coin, the proof platinum
coin, the reverse changes from year to year.
In 2009, the United States Mint introduced a new
six-year platinum proof coin series that explores the
core
concepts
of
American
democracy
by
highlighting the Preamble of the United States
Constitution. This program examines six principles
of the Preamble beginning with "To Form a More
Perfect Union" in 2009, followed by "To Establish
Justice" in 2010, "To Ensure Domestic Tranquility"
in 2011, and "To Provide a Common Defence" in
2012. In 2013 it would be "To Promote General
Welfare" and in 2014 "To Secure the Blessings of
Liberty to Ourselves and our Prosperity" -- or
excuse me, "out Posterity."
The candidate reverse designs for this program
have been inspired by narratives prepared by the
Chief Justice of the United States for each principle.
For the 2012 design candidates, the United States
Mint sculptor-engravers were used to design the
candidates and also we have some from the
contracted Artistic Infusion Program artists.
The

reverse

designs

in

previous

series

have

68
featured eagles supporting the American Eagle
brand to balance the goals of the brand identity and
allow artistic freedom. And an American Eagle privy
mark appears on the reverse of the design of the
coin. The privy mark was originally used to identify
the Mint or some aspects of the coin's production or
origin. More recently, it has been used as a design
for a marketing feature.
The obverse design since 1997 of the United States
Mint Platinum Proof Coin has featured Lady Liberty
on the obverse. Inscriptions on the obverse are
Liberty, E Pluribus Unum, the year of minting, and
In God We Trust.
Required inscriptions on the reverse are United
States of America, 0.995 platinum, one hundred
dollars and one ounce.
So one thing to note is on some of these designs
you will see defense is spelled with a C which is how
it is spelled in the Preamble and also justice's
narrative.
Okay, here is a picture of the proof obverse and we
will move on to the reveres.
Design one, Athena stands ready to defend, holding
a spear in her left hand and a shield in her right
hand. On the face of the shield is a fasces framed
by a pair of eagle wings symbolizing defense in
unity. Athena is the embodiment not only of the
tools of war but also the wisdom and unity derived
from shared principles of government.
Design two, Athena is holding a spear and shield
and is seated between two male figures. On the left
is the Executive Branch holding a sword,
representing the role as commander of the military.
On the right is Congress holding a copy of the
Constitution, representing the power to declare war.
Design three, Liberty holds a sword in one hand and
a liberty cap on the pole. She is flanked by a banner
reading "Congress and Commander in Chief."

69
Design four, a vigilant minuteman from the
Revolutionary War represents the protection and
defense of the country during a time of the writing
of the Constitution. The modern flag in the
background represents the United States today.
Design five, figures representing the Executive
Branch, right, and Legislative Branch, left, share the
responsibility of holding up the shield of defense.
Design six are two linked shields representing the
two branches of government responsible for our
defense. The left shield, "Declare," shows a pen and
scroll representing the congressional power to
declare war. The right shield, "Defend," represents
the Executive Branch and shows an eagle claw
clutching 13 arrows, imagery that was drawn from
the great shield. These two shields support the
liberty cap.
Design number seven is a variation of number six
with Liberty head and crest over the shield.
Design number eight, Liberty stands holding a
sword and a shield at her side.
Design number nine, Liberty wearing a traditional
cap stands at the ready with the American flag in
her left hand and sword in her right.
Design number ten, an eagle clutching a bundle of
arrows perched at the top of a shield encircled with
a banner reading "The Common Defence."
And our final design is a variation of number ten.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Okay, thank you, Ron.
Mr. Harrigal: And with this, I will turn it over to the
committee.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Okay, any questions for our
staff?
Member Olson: I've got one.

70
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Michael?
Member Olson: On number 11, was
significance of the shape of that shield?

is

the

Mr. Harrigal: It is just a variation, in that when you
look at number ten, it is a standard shape and very
similar to what we used on the one cent. So just
basically to give us a variation of a shield design.
Member Olson: Is there any historical use of that
shape or significance to it?
Mr. Harrigal: I'll turn it over to Don. He might know.
I don't know.
Mr. Everhart: It is just a decorative element.
Member Olson: Okay.
Member Moran: Mike, I think they used it on some
of the patterned coins from about the 1850s. It
never got adopted in anything.
Member Jansen: Yes, it looks almost like a twocenter or something that might have shown up in
the 1860s.
Member Moran: Yes, well, Longacre used it.
Member Jansen: Exactly.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Okay.
Member Wastweet: CFA's preference?
Mr. Harrigal: I'm sorry. CFA liked number ten.
Member Wastweet: Did they have comments on
why they liked ten over 11?
Mr. Harrigal: They did not. Typically, if you have
been to the CFA meetings, one person typically
would speak about what they like and what they
don't like. Somebody makes a motion and they all
agree or not. You know, there's not as much
dialogue in-depth but it is not a debating or full

71
analysis like the CCAC.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: All right, with that we will
launch into our -- Heidi, could you start us off on
this?
Member Wastweet: Do you want to do the vote?
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: What's that?
Member Wastweet: Do you want to vote on which
ones we talk about?
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Oh, yes, yes. Sorry.
Mr. Harrigal: I'd like to make one more thing -- and
Greg has corrected me here. They did talk about the
inscriptions, the one-ounce and the one hundred
dollars, that they wanted us to move those to the
outer -- not the outer rim but to make them more
into the bottom inner text circle where it says .9995
platinum.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Okay, understood.
All right. We have 11 designs here. It has been a
practice of ours in the past with a number of
designs for a given face that we go through an
initial process where we identify those designs that
we really want to talk about. If there is some
designs in here that none of us are interested in,
then we can save some time and focus on those
that there are interest.
So Ron, as I go through this, can you bring up each
image, starting with number one?
Mr. Harrigal: Certainly.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Okay, so with number one,
do we have interest in number one?
Member Scarinci: I want to say so, yes.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Okay, so we are going to
keep number one. Interest in number two?

72
Member Scarinci: Yes.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Number three? Interest in
number three? Okay, we will set number three
aside.
Number four? I think there is.
Member Scarinci: Yes.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Okay. Number five? I will
say yes.
Number six? Okay, we are setting six aside. How
about seven? Okay, we will set that one aside.
Number eight?
Member Jansen: Yes.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Yes?
Member Jansen: Yes.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Number nine?
Member Jansen: Yes.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Ten? Interest in ten?
Member Olson: Yes.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: How about 11?
Member Jansen: Yes.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Okay, so there were three
that we have kind of set aside. Number three,
number six, and number seven. And we will proceed
on the balance. And so I will ask -- since we have
gone through this process, I will ask the committee
to focus on those eight that we have identified
interest in.
So with that, I am going to ask Heidi to start off our
discussion.
Member Wastweet: Thanks.

73
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: You laugh. You wish I
hadn't.
Member Wastweet: On design number one, I think
we are hitting the symbology correctly. This coin is
about defense, not offense. I like having a shield
involved as our symbol. So I like it in that regards.
The composition is nice.
The only thing that I don't like about this design or
any of these designs is they simply look 100 percent
old fashioned. It is not just calling back to our
history but living in our history and there is no
elements at all in here that I see are pulling it into a
contemporary zone.
The other designs in this series, while they had a
classical foundation to them, there was some
element in them that we liked that brought it into a
contemporary realm and I am not seeing that in any
of these designs.
And in that regard, I am rather disappointed in this
group. I like that we have so many choices but all
the choices are so similar that it's disappointing.
Design number one I would be fine with other than
the fact that I have already stated.
Design number two, I think that even though there
is a lot going on here, it could be achieved because
of the depth and size of this coin. There is a little
trouble with her left elbow being over the shoulder
of the man behind her, that is a little challenge, and
then having the staff in front of that. It's a
sculptural challenge I think that our sculptors can
navigate that okay.
I don't see the need for her to be sitting on this
floating island. I don't understand that. I think that
can be done away with. Not a fan of that.
On to number four. Again, too historical for my
tastes. I appreciate that the flag in the background
is supposed to be modern-looking but it really

74
doesn't come across that way. The overwhelming
image here is an historic figure and it is more of an
offense with the rifle, rather than a defense of the
shield.
Number five, here again we have the shield which I
like. There is the controversial spelling of the word
defence. I understand that this is a historical
spelling. Again, that's going to have be explained to
every person that owns one.
The 0.9995 at the bottom, I don't like the way it
touches the shield. I don't like the way it is spread
out. I think that should be better organized. The
characters are again old fashioned but they are
drawn well and the composition is nice.
Number eight, I think this Liberty is very
unattractive. I don't like the spikes on her head.
They look very heavy, where the iconography of our
country and the Liberty with the rays coming off her
head are supposed to, in my view, represent a
radiant light coming from our idea of liberty. And
these spikes look so heavy and, I'm sorry to say,
punk rock and not in a good contemporary way.
I also am looking at the sprigs of olive branches at
the bottom. They are just too small and
insignificant. They look straggly. I don't like that.
The shield is down to the side so she is really not
defending herself. She has given up defending up
herself. She is holding the sword in a downward
position which is not offensive or defensive. So I am
not drawn to this design.
Number nine, compositionally, this has got some
movement going to this. It is interesting
composition, but I can't get past the fact that the
flag is too long. It is out of proportion. She is not
defending herself at all. She is waiving a flag and a
sword. It doesn't say defense at all.
Designs 10 and 11, which are virtually the same, I
think they are attractive. Again, we have the

75
controversial spelling of the word defense.
I like the second shield, the one on number 11
because it is a little different. And just for that
reason alone I like that. The snake-necked eagle
again looks very old fashioned. We see this in very
old coins, not modern coins.
And that is all the comments I have.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Okay. Michael?
Member Wastweet: If I may, there is one thing I
forgot.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Sure, please.
Member Moran: You can take my turn, if you want.
Member Wastweet: Oh, never mind. That was it.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Okay.
Member Moran: I really couldn't look at any of these
without taking them in context with what is on the
obverse being Lady Liberty. And as a result, I had
some trouble with the allegorical figures as you go
through these, the first one and the second one.
And I will let it go as far as that goes on. Neither
one of those would get my vote.
I think Heidi is right that the plinth down there is
unnecessary. And I really think that the lettering for
the one ounce, the fineness of the platinum and the
one hundred dollars is immaterial to the coin. It is
not going to be spent. It needs to be put in as small
lettering as you can get by with and still not have it
be too small.
Number four is reasonable. I do like it. I think it is
understandable and if these were the minutemen
and it was for defense not offense. So you don't
have the field cluttered up with having that
explained. Again, I think the valuations down there
are too big.

76
Number five looks like Broom-Hilda on the left. But
in terms of -- and I am going to take it -- I think
you can take that one ounce and the one hundred
dollars if the committee decides on that one, it all
needs to be put down there in that bottom halfmoon if you want to call it and get it out of the field
and make the lettering fit. It is an example of where
lettering gets in the way of the design and clutters
it.
The next one is number eight. I can't get -- I leaned
over to Heidi when I saw this -- and Broom-Hilda. It
just doesn't get it done for me. It is way too heavy.
The next one, that one reminds me -- there is a
vignette on the old French, I think it was the ten
franc bill, very close to that. And Heidi's comment
about the flag is correct. While it does impart
motion, it takes way too much to get it done. I can't
go there.
Ten and 11 really need to be considered together.
They are both the same with the exception of the
shield. The shield is unique on number 11 and I like
it there. I don't like that empty space on number
ten. Again, I think that the lettering and valuation of
the coin, the necessary evils there, need to be
compacted and put down at the bottom in much
smaller print in a semi- half-moon-like affair.
And I think it also is consistent with the Liberty on
the front, although it is not consistent with what has
gone before with the platinum series. But probably
my vote is for number 11.
CHAIRPERSON MARKS: Donald.
Member Scarinci: You know, Mike, it is tough to go - they always put the new guy after Heidi.
Member Moran: A rite of initiation.
Member Scarinci: So, you just have to struggle
through until the next new guy. Then they go next
to Heidi.

77
Member Moran: I like sitting next to her.
(Laughter.)
Member Scarinci: I think, first of all, you know, a
point I want to make with these designs, we are so
close in design one and design nine. We are so close
to depicting Liberty in a new and modern way. And
you know, without all the old stuff, without the
shield and the design from the past and the fasces,
that may mean something to an academic and a
scholar but I have said this before when we have
talked about the shield design on the penny. You
know, ask any kid in school and that doesn't have
any emotional value today.
I mean, that is an image from a different time and a
different place, and a different mind. And the new
images, you know, the post-internet age, you know,
where kids are growing up and where kids are
seeing Liberty in new ways post-9/11 and seeing
the defense of our country with eyes that we didn't
see. And I say we as one of the older guys. You
know, one of the older people.
The post-9/11 era has a different view of the
defense of our nation. And coming up with it
artistically is really your challenge. And you know, I
think the person who does that, the person who
does that will come up with the next Adolph
Weinman design. A brilliant design for a new era.
And that is the one thing that we have been talking
about again and again. Let's depict -- let's figure out
how we depict liberty in a new and modern
contemporary way.
Anyway, I like these two images because at least I
think we are moving in the right direction without
the crown, without the shield, without the other
trappings of the 19th Century. So I think we should
keep going in that direction.
As a side, number eight, ever since I moved to
Greenwich Village, I mean, without the sword, that
looks perfectly normal to me. You see that every

78
day.
(Laughter.)
Member Scarinci: So -- but anyway, more seriously,
I favor number four. I don't care for the shield
designs. I actually collect this series, by the way. I
disclosed that. It is one of my favorite series
because I think the designs have been just really
great on this series. And to me, you know, to my
eye, these shields and things, you know, there is no
point. Why are we doing this on a platinum coin? It
is a collector coin. You know, so why are we doing
it? In the approved version of it, which is where
these coins will appear, they are all collector coins.
They are not even bullion coins. They are bullion,
but you know what I mean.
So I kind of like number four, and if John were here,
you know, I could hear John saying to us, no, that is
not an offensive position because the formation of
our nation was a defensive action. And therefore,
this is a defensive action, not an offensive action. I
can hear John saying that as if he were sitting in the
room.
So, you know, artistically I like the way the flag
wraps. I think that playing with the flag that way I
think is really neat. I like the space. I like the space
and the openness opposite the flag. I like the
juxtaposition of the lines that are there on the gun
and on the flag.
So, you know, to my eye, number four does the
trick with the theme of defense of our nation,
without having to resort to 19th century imagery
which -- anyway, enough said about it.
Chair Marks: Thank you, Donald.
Whenever we get into this kind of classical imaging,
I struggle with my split personality when it comes to
American numismatic art. There is a part of me that
just loves the old allegorical, mythological
portrayals and the symmetry and the artistry, just

79
the grand nature of what those images, how they
impact me.
On the other hand, the other part of me wants to
still stay with that kind of iconology but I would like
to see it interpreted in a modern way. And probably
the best example -- not probably. The best example
of that is the 9/11 medal, where we have this new
and interesting portrayal of Liberty holding the
flame of remembrance. It is just beautiful. It sets it
in our time. It is set off to the side, rather than
perfect symmetry. There is a lot of interest in that.
And then the portrayal, the symbolic portrayal of
the Twin Towers and such, it is just a wonderful
example of what I am talking about when I talk
about the modern portrayal of Liberty and other
figures that are common to us in American coinage.
So there is a few hints of modernism in what we
have been given here but I am kind of falling back
on my classical tradition here. You are all familiar
with the term comfort food. To me this is comfort
art and so I am going to kind of talk from that point
of view.
The image of Athena on number one, while it is
classical, I do see a hint of some modernism here.
She is not exactly symmetrical on the pallette and
such. And it is interesting with the shield and so
forth. So I like that image.
And I will back up here and just thank you artists
for creating these images. This is wonderful stuff.
Number two, I really love this image. The image of
Athena surrounded by the Executive and the
Legislative. I even like the images that the
Executive and the Legislative are casting at each
other. You know, there is tension. There is tension
in that relationship and we have all heard it. You
know, the President shouldn't have gone and sent
troops to here or there. You know, that is what the
refrain of Congress is and the refrain back from the
Executive is, you know, I am the Commander in
Chief. I am supposed to defend the nation.

80
So this tells a story. Now true it is presented in a
very classical way. This could have been produced
in 1850 but I love this design and I will be
supporting it.
Number four is interesting. With the flag in back and
such, it suggests a modern application here. I guess
my concern with this is that it isolates the idea of
defense to the colonial period, whereas some of
these other images are time enduring. I mean, it
doesn't matter what time you are in, the iconology
or the symbolism it portrays Athena or the
Executive or the Legislative, what have you, those
aren't necessarily isolated in a certain time.
So while I find some appeal in number four, I am
concerned about isolating our message to a colonial
period.
Five, I like five. I am trying to decide if the C in
"defence" is really an issue. Part of me says this is a
chance to educate, maybe get people to actually
read the constitution. The other side of me knows
that there will be people who look at this and
because they are uneducated will scoff at it.
Member Jansen: Would you also go for potato
there?
Chair Marks: Yes, okay. So you know, maybe it is
an opportunity to educate. So I won't criticize that
but I don't know. Maybe it should be there just as it
is presented.
I will just say, there is a little bit of me that looks at
these two images and I don't know what it is,
maybe they are too short or they are too wide. I'm
not certain. I think there may have been a little
more appeal. I don't know.
Number eight already others have articulated some
of the symbolic shortcomings, if you will. I think
Heidi has pointed out some of those that I agree
with her on.

81
Number nine, I am just, it is more of a modern idea.
I am just not sure -- I don't know. There is
something about this image that just -- I don't
know. It just doesn't, it doesn't have the chemistry
for me.
The shields, we have seen so many shields with an
eagle over the top. I know it is an iconic image that
has shown up on many of our coins. I guess I would
just like something a little different than that. I'm
hoping we don't go in that direction and that is just
my own personal preference speaking there.
So my favorites would be one and two, with some
support also for number five.
Mike.
Member Olson: All right. There is just a couple here
that really struck me. I really, really like number
two for the old style that it portrays and the
completeness of what the subject matter is. We
have got both branches there. We have got the
shield. We have got the spear. It is just a really,
really nice design, in my opinion, very well
executed.
That being said, number four when we talk about
the rifle being an offensive weapon, back in the
early days our minutemen were getting on ships
and going overseas to wage any war. Their sole and
primary focus was to be ready at a minute's notice
to defend our land. And they are the precursor to
today's National Guard.
So the common defense for me when I look at that
image of the minuteman, I think of the farmer, the
shopkeeper, the average person who is not a
professional soldier but is willing to take up arms at
a moment's notice to defend his family and his way
of life.
So this one will be getting strong support from me.
I do also like the flag in the back, which does tie it
in very nicely with the modern day.

82
The only other two that I have got any interest in at
all would be number ten and number 11. I am
somewhat more of a traditionalist. I do appreciate
these older designs with the shield and the eagle. I
think either one of those would work. My preference
would be for number ten because I am familiar with
that design of shield. I am not as familiar with the
other design.
So those will be the four that will be getting support
from me.
Chair Marks: Mike Bugeja.
Member Bugeja: I really would like to compliment
the artists on this batch. I mean to have eight to
consider is a compliment in and of itself but there
are some brush strokes that really need to be
complimented.
Take a look at number one and I know we are
focusing on Athena but look at the shield. It is a
modern design and it takes all of our, well the
iconography of our coins that symbolize liberty and
defense and it creates an eagle out of it. It is an
absolutely wonderful design in itself.
And I am hoping that some of these designs, if not
chosen, can be recycled elsewhere because this is a
cache of riches and I mean that literally and
figuratively. This is a stunning design.
I absolutely love number two as well. I think
everything people have said before that is
important. When we go into more of the classical
figures, it might be important in future figures to
experiment with the different ethnicities of hair, skin
color. We have basic Northern European designs
here.
I love this one. It is not a criticism of this one but it
would be interesting to render a more classical
design modern.
I actually love everything about number four as

83
well. However, we have seen images like this
before. I'm not sure we have seen images like one
and two before but I love the flag as a draping
background.
Number five is also very appealing. And many of
these should be not just discarded if not used
because this has so much speaking. There is a
confidence in the woman's, in Liberty's faces. That
is what I really appreciate, the idea of character
coming forth. I would like to see more of that
character in the faces of the presidential spouses
but here we have confidence and defense.
Number eight is very interesting to me. I think we
have to really work on the image of light as Heidi
has said, as opposed to the Viking helmet. It just
doesn't work for me but we have seen these spikes
before on other designs. I think we need to look at
some classical pictures to see how that was
portrayed.
On number nine, this is just an alluring picture full
of motion and wind and texture and determination.
I like the modernism of this. But again because one
and two are so classically stunning, I have to favor
that.
On ten and 11, we have seen these things before. I
like the way it is balanced. I like how it is put
together. It is fine symbolism. But again, I think
that one and two will be collected by many
hobbyists with pleasure.
Chair Marks: Thank you. Erik?
Member Jansen: Ron can you put up the obverse
again that you put up during -- there you go.
First thing, Kaarina if it was you this time and
maybe Cynthia later, thank you, thank you, thank
you for the little backdrop piece from Chief Justice
Roberts. We didn't get that in a lot of places so we
were on our own. But just to read that tells me all
right, here are the central issues that the artists

84
were chartered to. And that just really, really helps
me.
All right. Okay, I want everybody to get a good
picture of this in their mind. This is a fairly
architecturally precise drawing. It is on all the
different denominations, even though it may not
produce the lower half quarter and tenth ounces.
But the point I want to make here and carry into my
comments on the other side is one, this is you can
argue about the price of gold or the price of
platinum and I would say it is a push more or less,
this is the top end of this country's coinage. This is
the finest we publish. This is the finest there is. And
this drawing represents that level of fineness.
Now, I was a collector for the first ten or 11 years of
this series when we were doing the eagle in 15 or
11 different natural situations. And I have to tell
you, I am going to split with some of the opinions
here on the panel. When it went to this kind of
Venus and mars and angelic and other kind of
symbolic representations of Liberty, I stopped
collecting it because I just thought that was just
getting a little bit -- It didn't bring anything new
versus where the world was going with their new
designs.
So with that, remember the precision and the
sharpness of this drawing and let's go to the options
here.
Now I think number one could be cast but not real
easily. I think the shield is an innovative composite
of older allegorical symbols that have been used in
the past quite successfully. However, it doesn't exist
-- It doesn't appeal to me personally. So I discount
one on that basis.
If you go to number two, it is the kind of old world
look. I would love to see that shield in stars and
bars but it is not. So I am going to pass it up in this
analysis.
So I would go to four. Don, you made a comment

85
which quite honestly I missed. And so thank you for
making that, Donald. The flag and the stripes in the
backdrop here is I think an artist trying to give us
what we are asking for. And that is, kind of a new
way of looking and merging an presenting the
symbols in a way that is artistically sound.
I don't know what is going on at the end of the gun
here. What is that? Is that a cap on the end? Am I
missing something?
Member Moran: It's missing the ramrod, too.
Member Jansen: Okay, so I think there is some
authenticity issues here which we might be missing
that I think deserve being looked into if this is a
design the group adopts. I am going to make similar
comments on another diagram here in a moment.
I like the fact that this guy's defense is, it is a book.
And you can call it whatever you want. You can call
it a Bible. You could call it a ledger. You could call it
the Book of Knowledge. You can call it anything you
want. I happen to like that. It wasn't in the write-up
but the flag in the backdrop shows the unity is
strength message. And he is the vigilant defender. I
like this one more than I thought I was going to.
And largely on comments from Donald.
I am going to pass five, six, and seven. I want to go
to eight. Yes, we can talk about the Norse horns and
a number of things. Somewhere down the line, we
are going to want this image again because this
image is too strong, too simple, too direct, and so
incredibly vertical. It is going to be just right
somewhere. And then we are going to have talk
about where are her feet. We are going to have to
talk about things about her crown. We are going to
have to talk about her hair, her dress, blah, blah,
blah. But we are going to want to remember this
image, I think. But I don't think it is for us today.
Number nine. Number nine is kind of cool. I mean
the flag is all wrong, fine. The length is wrong. It is
a little too angular. If her drapey-ness isn't as

86
angular as the flag is angular, then my eye just kind
of wants to move one to the other and so forth.
But the cool thing here is her shield is the flag or
the pole that it is on. It is all the same thing. And to
me, that was Roberts' write-up. That was Roberts'
write-up. Unity is strength.
And so the ten and 11 don't get my vote. For a
penny, that is a great symbol with bars on a shield
and so forth. For a hundred dollar as good as we
can make it, I think you are dumbing down the
imagery. I'm sorry. I just can't stand for ten or 11
on that basis alone.
At a two thousand dollar coin, it will be more than
that in two or three years, I think the customer paid
for more than that image.
So I end up supporting nine for the reasons I said.
And supporting four for the reason that we have to
make a decision.
Chair Marks: Okay, thank you, Erik.
Okay, that brings us to the conclusion of our
discussion. I'm going to look to Greg. Do we have
any information on lunch, Andy?
Mr. Fishburn: We can do that but if you are
completed with the platinum, you are well ahead of
schedule.
Chair Marks: Right.
Mr. Fishburn: You would just be getting to that.
Chair Marks: Yes, I think we are going to be okay
with the schedule. We still have to circle back and
talk about America the Beautiful. We have to finish
our discussion and any follow-ups on this one.
Was the intent that we were going to break for
lunch?
Mr. Fishburn: The intent was to break for lunch.

87
Chair Marks: Okay. I think when we come back, we
have only got two items. If we can wrap up the two
programs we looked at this morning before we go to
lunch, if we can wrap those up, when we come back
after lunch all we need to do are the First Spouses
and then probably what will be a fairly quick
discussion,
maybe
half
an
hour
on
our
recommendations for our next annual report.
We are not going to do the PowerPoint this time.
And we have got all afternoon to do those two
things.
Member Moran: Alice Paul?
Chair Marks: She is part of the First Spouse,
although she is not a First Spouse but she is part of
the First Spouse program.
And I am sensing from some of us, and myself
included, that a break might be helpful. We have
kind of been at this for about -Member Scarinci: Definitely a break but I was kind
of hoping if there was a way we could just use one
of the rooms and have food brought in, like
sandwiches or something, that would be helpful. I
think we don't get enough time with each other. You
know, we don't really get to spend time with each
other. And going to a noisy restaurant -Member Olson: We could go get something and
bring it back for that matter. I think coordinating
and bringing something in here is probably more
time than it is worth.
Mr. Fishburn: Why don't we just adjourn and deal
with -Chair Marks: Yes, and we can adjourn as a group
informally we can decide how we want to do that. I
like the concept of what you are presenting. Maybe
we can all go out and grab something and agree to
meet back here at a certain time in another room or
even in here.

88
Okay, so with that in mind, may I ask everyone to
complete their scoring sheet for the Platinum
Program. Let's get that down to Erik.
And then at this point, I have some results for our
tallies on America the Beautiful. Okay, I will wait for
Ron if he can get those images up so we can look at
these when I announce them, so we can know
exactly what I am talking about. And we are going
to go to Fort -- Which one are we going to go to
first, White Mountain?
Member Jansen: White Mountain.
Chair Marks: Okay, White Mountain. Image number
two received ten, which is the high tally. And I will
just note here that with seven members
participating, the highest possible total is 21, which
means I will remind everyone that we have a policy
in place that we need to achieve a 50 percent
threshold for a recommendation, which in this case
would be ten and a half or 11.
Okay, so with ten technically we don't have a
recommendation. We have a preference, I suppose
you could frame it that way. And we will circle back
and talk about these. I want to get these all out on
the table first.
The next one in order was Perry's Victory, I believe.
Perry's Victory highest tally was design number one
with seven out 21. And just for the record, number
two got one and number three had zero.
I'm sorry. I'll back up and do White Mountain more
completely. Number one, design number one had
one. Design number three had two. Designs four
and five had seven each.
Okay, the next one in the order that we looked at
them was that Great Basin? Yes, Great Basin. Great
Basin we have a recommendation of design number
one with 17 of the 21 possible. Design two had one.
Design three had two. Design four had one. So a
real clear indication there in support of number one.

89
After that we go to Fort McHenry. Again, we have a
preference, not a recommendation with design
number one with eight total out of 21. Design
number two received three points. Design -- I'm
sorry did I say -- Whatever I said, design number
two had three points. Design number three had
zero. Design number four had two.
Then moving to Mount Rushmore, we achieved a
recommendation, just achieved it with 11 points
assigned to design number one. So that would be
our recommendation. And with the others with this
tally, design number two had one. Design number
three had five. Design number four had four.
So it looks like we have got two recommendations
and three preferences. Minority preferences, I
should probably frame it that way.
So I know that -Member Wastweet: Wait. We are so close that I
think I would be okay with us making a
recommendation.
Chair Marks: Okay. Well yes, let me -- Let's look at
these in the order that we looked at them. So let's
go to White Mountain.
There is nothing wrong if someone here wants to
step up and just say I am going to assign one more
point to this.
Member Wastweet: I will do that.
Chair Marks: Will you? Okay. So Heidi your two
becomes a three. Okay, so that would recommend
design number two on White Mountain.
The next one we looked at was Perry's Victory. That
is seven. I think at this point we probably want to
talk about number one, what we want to do about
that. So before I offer any motion because maybe
you will beat me to the punch, I don't want the
committee to sabotage it. What do you want to do

90
with one, if anything?
Member Scarinci: I would make a motion to just
liberate the guy. Take him out of prison.
Member Bugeja: What was that, Don? I didn't hear
it.
Member Scarinci: Motion to remove the bars.
Member Olson: Second.
Chair Marks: Just the bars? Can we clarify that
motion? Is that what you want to do?
Member Scarinci: Yes, just take them out.
Chair Marks: So would the monument in the
background remain as is?
Member Scarinci: I would say take him out and
send it back to the artists to compose based on him
being out.
Chair Marks: I just want to clarify. Do you want the
monument still there?
Member Scarinci: I wouldn't have an opinion about
that. I just want to remove the bars and let the
artist take it from there.
Member Jansen: It is definitely going to take an
artist's eye to -Chair Marks: Okay, hold on a minute. Did we get a
second on that?
Member Olson: Yes, I did.
Chair Marks: You seconded it. Okay. Go ahead.
Member Jansen: Yes, it is definitely going to take an
artist's eye to rebalance that, otherwise it is going
to look like a -- It is going to be bad. It is going to
look like something is missing.
Chair Marks: Okay, would the motion then be to

91
remove the bars and recompose?
Member Scarinci: And send it back to the artist to
recompose.
Chair Marks: Recommendation to recompose
whatever the artist might decide to do with that.
Member Scarinci: Correct.
Mr. Everhart: One question, Don. You say remove
the bars but what about the arc around the walls.
Chair Marks: Are you talking about all the devices
that relate to an interior?
Member Scarinci: Correct, everything that puts him
indoors.
Chair Marks: Everything that puts it indoors.
Member Bugeja: You know, I am going to have to
counter that motion with another one to -Chair Marks: We have a motion on the table.
Member Bugeja: And the discussion is that I am
going to counter it with another one.
Chair Marks: We could have a motion to amend.
You could have a motion to amend it, if you could
get a second.
Member Scarinci: I shouldn't have made a motion
so quickly. So why don't we table my motion?
Chair Marks: No, no. Motions are good because they
focus us.
Member Scarinci: Okay.
Chair Marks: Thank you for making the motion.
Member Scarinci: Okay.
Chair Marks: Go ahead, Michael.
Member Bugeja: I'm uncomfortable with this. This is

92
not a slight variation of number one by removing
the bars. You have got orientation. You have got
space. It is going to be an entirely new design. I am
uncomfortable giving any artist cart blanche with
the problems of orientation, size, and others. It is
going to be a completely new design to get it right.
So I am uncomfortable with going forth with this
motion.
Chair Marks: So do you have a motion to amend?
Member Bugeja: My motion is to affirm the CFA's in
choosing none.
Chair Marks: Greg are you our parliamentarian? So
would that be a situation where Michael's motion
would need to have the agreement of the original
motion maker and second?
Mr. Weinman: Actually I think in this case Michael
made an entirely separate motion.
Chair Marks: Well that would be a motion to amend.
And so he would have to have a second to amend -Mr. Weinman: Yes.
Chair Marks: -- on a motion.
Mr. Weinman: Technically speaking, yes.
Chair Marks: I think according to Roberts Rule's that
is what we would need to do.
Mr. Weinman: Right.
Chair Marks: So is there a second to the motion that
Michael just put on the table?
Member Jansen: Second.
Chair Marks: Okay. Could you restate that Michael?
Member Bugeja: You know, it is called a hot house.
In the legislature it is like strike everything after the
enacting clause and add the following. And the
following is to strike the main motion of amending

93
the current number one design and changing this to
an affirmation of the CFA's -- affirming the CFA's no
recommendation.
Chair Marks: Okay. So essentially your amending
motion is no recommendation.
Member Bugeja: Yes, not recommendation.
Chair Marks: No recommendation. And was that
your understanding, Erik?
Member
Jansen:
That
wasn't
quite
my
understanding. I really feel like we need to be
helpful and sensitive and not just kind of fall in line
behind CFA saying -(Whereupon, a raspberry
sound effect was made.)
Member Jansen: I don't know how you are going to
transcribe that.
Chair Marks: Well we can make no recommendation
free of whatever they do.
Member Jansen: Well that's my point, though. We
could make a recommendation couched in the
following committee thought.
Chair Marks: So are you withdrawing your second?
Member Jansen: It sounds like I should.
Chair Marks: But are you?
Member Jansen: I am.
Chair Marks: Okay, so is there another second for
that motion for a no recommendation?
Okay, so I'm sorry, Michael -Member Bugeja: That's okay. It's quite alright.
Chair Marks: -- your motion fails for lack of a
second.

94
That brings us back to Donald's original motion to
remove all the interior devices and then ask the
artist to recompose. Okay, is there discussion on
that motion?
Member Moran: Can we hear from either Don or
Heidi on how that stuff works?
Chair Marks: Don, you have some comments about
that motion?
Mr. Everhart: You mean specifically?
Chair Marks: Yes.
Mr. Everhart: I hate to dictate. I'm not going to
comment on Roberts Rules but I can comment on
the arch.
Chair Marks: Well that's exactly what you are here
for.
Mr. Everhart: Okay.
Chair Marks: So you just tell us what you think
about all that.
Mr. Everhart: Yes. What I would do is probably
make the figure, the sculpture a little bit larger.
That means moving it over to the left a bit. And also
after removing all the lattice work, move the
monument to the left of it and possibly increase the
land area at the bottom to bring that up and to take
up some of that negative space.
Chair Marks: Okay. Any questions about that input?
Member Olson: I just have a comment. As I stated
in my initial comments on this, this is about two
physical objects that are there, the statue and the
monument. It also, choosing this one would honor
the American hero who is the reason for the
monument.
So I think if we can make suggestions that allow the
Mint some latitude to modify that design, we would

95
end up with a design hopefully that the majority of
us could live with.
Chair Marks: And I will just go on the record for
myself saying that I do like the motion that Donald
made. If this goes through, I want it to be a motion
that the art staff will feel like they have some
freedom and how they work with it. I think that is
the intent of this motion. Correct?
So I don't want this motion to be taken as trying to
micromanage what you are doing. We are
uncomfortable with all the interior stuff. Let's free
that image out of all of that and recompose it,
whatever that means to the artist.
Mr. Everhart: I think the artist can work with that.
Chair Marks: I think we will get a very clean image
this way. So any other -Member Wastweet: Gary?
Chair Marks: Yes, Heidi, please.
Member Wastweet: If our recommendation is to
send this back to the artist to rework it, how is that
different than rejecting it and asking for new
designs?
Chair Marks: Because we are isolating one design
and saying go work on this. Rejecting all current
designs would mean that they are going to go back
and produce something new.
Member Wastweet: But new could be a rework of
this plus something else.
Chair Marks: It could be but it is broader. It is a
broader direction.
Member Wastweet: But we wouldn't have a chance
to look at it again.
Member Bugeja: That's my point.

96
Chair Marks: With timelines, I don't know. We
probably wouldn't see this again, would we? Andy
would be the person to -Member Wastweet: What would happen if we
rejected this? What would happen?
Chair Marks: As far as the schedules go, Ron or I
don't know who knows that information.
Mr. Harrigal: Well, it kind of puts us into something
we would have to discuss internally. I don't think we
can -- I mean we haven't been in this kind of
position before where one committee came out and
said none of the above and the second committee
comes out and says none of the above and then we
look at that. What can we do? I mean, we are
looking to you for advice and recommendations.
On that, I think we can work with, I mean if that
embodies the basis of what the CCAC wants to do,
then recomposing with direction on one is good. The
other opens up the flood gates to a lot of different
designs, which we go through the whole process a
few months from now.
Member Olson: I think is the sentiment of the
committee that we sure as heck don't want to see
flags of other countries. So to protect that position,
really the only option is to go with -Mr. Everhart: On number one, we are not going to
redraw anything. We are going to move some things
around and size them a little differently.
Member Bugeja: And that is my main concern. I
mean while we are, well Gary you are deferring to
the artists and I appreciate that. I think what is
worse is coming up with a coin that criticizes it after
the fact. And that is why I made the motion that I
did. If we could at least come back and see
something, I would feel more comfortable but we
are actually only given one design here because
even what you stated Mr. Chairman about the flags.
And I agree with what you stated. We are just given

97
one design. And that just seems too narrow a focus
for a U.S. coin.
Chair Marks: I understand. And I think if that is
your position, and obviously it is, you would be a no
vote. If this motion fails, then we would be open for
another motion, perhaps to reject all designs and
ask for new ones. And I think Heidi you may find
yourself doing that.
Member Wastweet: I am very leery with us just
giving them the directive to remove the
architectural structure here. Because if you look at
that and imagine what is going to happen, even
with some resizing and shuffling around, you have
two tall vertical elements in a circle. Not an exciting
composition. I can't picture how that is going to be.
I think it is too big of a change.
Chair Marks: All right. Okay, is there any further
discussion? Good point. Any further discussion?
Member Olson: I seconded Donald's motion.
Chair Marks: You were the second? Okay. Hearing
no further discussion, I will ask for a show of hands
for those who support the motion to remove all of
the interior elements and recompose the sculpture
and monument for design number one. All those in
favor of that motion, please raise your hand.
(Show of hands.)
Chair Marks: We have one. We have two in favor.
All those opposed?
(Show of hands.)
Chair Marks: Heidi you swayed me.
Member Jansen: You swayed me as well.
Chair Marks: Five against. So that motion fails.
So we are right now where we are, -- I just want to
clarify it. Where we are is that we would go forward

98
with a non-recommendation having received seven
points of support out of a possible 21. So we don't
have a recommendation right now. We have, I don't
know what you want to call it.
Member Wastweet: Preference.
Chair Marks: A minority preference. So are we
comfortable with that or do you want a stronger
motion?
Member Bugeja: I want a stronger motion. I am not
comfortable with that because it is giving the
impression that seven of us are for design number
one, when clearly seven of us are not, based on the
separate vote.
Chair Marks: Are you prepared to make a motion,
then?
Member Bugeja: Yes, I would like reconsideration of
no recommendation. Reconsideration would require
a second and a majority vote.
Chair Marks: Reconsideration?
Member
motion.

Bugeja:

Reconsideration

of

my

failed

Chair Marks: Well why don't you just make a new
one?
Member Bugeja: All right. A new one would be that
we make no recommendation whatsoever on the
Perry design.
Chair Marks: Is there a second on Michael's motion?
Member Wastweet: I will go ahead and second that.
Chair Marks: Okay, Heidi is the second. Okay, let's
have some discussion on this, folks.
Member Olson: The danger we run into and I think
there is strong sentiment on the committee that we
don't want to wind up with something with the

99
Union Jack or Canadian flag on there. If we don't
make any recommendation, then we throw it back
in the Mint's lap to pick because they didn't get any
direction from the CFA.
Member Wastweet: But we have already voiced
that.
Chair Marks: Let me clarify. Your motion is to have
new ones brought back to us?
Member Bugeja: You know, that is not my purview
to do that. I think what we are actually sending a
message that too few and too similar designs could
actually lead to this outcome. And my role is I really
respect what the artists have done. I made my
comments constructively. But what I don't want to
happen is a coin that is criticized after it is minted.
And so I reluctantly make this motion. I don't do it
enthusiastically. I just think that shifting some of
the elements can create larger problems without our
looking at that and other potential designs.
Chair Marks: Okay.
Member Jansen: Is it worth framing it kind of in a
time urgency sense that if the Mint needs to move
forward to hit their schedules, we would recommend
a removal of blah, blah, rebalancing by the artist. If
time is not so urgent, we would request new
designs.
Chair Marks: Let me ask -- I want to ask the staff a
question. Maybe you have already answered this. I
apologize if you have.
But seeing that this is part of the 2013 edition of
America the Beautiful, isn't there still time for new
designs?
Mr. Harrigal: Well based on the schedule that we
have from last year, to introduce coins in January
we were reviewing these designs in October of last
year. And that is how long it takes to get into
production for us to do the pre-production and

100
everything on five designs and introduce our proof
sets in January.
Obviously there will be an impact on the timeline. I
don't know what it would be at this point on how we
do it. We can't go forward with a proof set with only
four quarters in it. We have to have all five.
Chair Marks: Right. Let me ask you this, then.
Obviously, there was a culling process that went
about before we got to three. I know some of those
were probably ruled out for legal copyright reasons.
I don't know.
Mr. Harrigal: There were a number of reasons.
Kaarina is not here right now.
Chair Marks: Well were some of them strictly design
preference?
Mr. Harrigal: A lot of it was historical accuracy
issues, and things like that.
Chair Marks: Okay. Were there any that were just
ruled out because it was thought not to be a good
design?
Mr. Harrigal: I don't believe so. No, we didn't.
Chair Marks: Okay.
Mr. Harrigal: All right. I mean it was controversy
about the accuracy of some of the history on that.
And the focus was Perry's Victory and the
International Peace Memorial. It is the broader thing
and as anyone that has been up there knows, you
have got the memorial which is kind of simplistic in
nature.
Chair Marks: Okay. Can I summarize? Do I get it
right to say that your answer is no, there is no time
because it will impinge on other programs?
Mr. Harrigal: I can't say that it is not. I can't say the
answer is no. What I can say is it will take some
pretty intense discussions internal to the Mint and

101
ultimately on whether we would go forward or not
without a recommendation.
Chair Marks: Okay. So here is the way I sum this up
and committee, tell me if you see it differently but
right now, with seven votes supporting this thing, if
we leave it there, this is probably we get. If we pass
this motion, then we basically throw the whole thing
back to the Mint and we will see what happens.
Mr. Fishburn: Mr. Chairman, I would just note that
one of the issues that we are facing here is we tried
to present things that are actually at the Park so
you are not going to get images in the battle and
you are also not guaranteed a review of these
designs, if it does go back for new designs. You may
get though.
Chair Marks: We could get a new perspective on the
sculpture, a new perspective on the monument, or
maybe both mixed together somehow.
Mr. Fishburn: That is correct.
Chair Marks: That's definitely possible. And I think
that is probably what we would see. So understand
that, that the imaging that we have is probably
going to be the same but maybe different
perspectives.
Member Jansen: Mr. Chairman, is it inappropriate
we might put a proxy subset of us together to
review that to let it go?
Chair Marks: I'm not understanding.
Member Jansen: It comes out with a new design
relayed out, a subset of three of us, two of us, one
of us, look at it and say go, go.
Chair Marks: I'm not sure that -Mr. Fishburn: I think you would need a quorum.
Chair Marks: Yes, I think we would need a quorum.

102
Mr. Fishburn: Yes, and also new designs we would
have to run through the CFA as well.
Chair Marks: Okay. Is there anything new to offer
on this motion? I'm thinking we are all pretty clear
what a no vote means and what a yes vote means.
Okay?
Member Olson: Why don't you recap what we have
talked so much about.
Chair Marks: Okay. Perry's Victory, design number
one received seven votes in support out of 21. If we
leave it there, that would mean a no vote on this
motion, then I think we can expect that the Mint will
go forward with number one because with the CFA
weighing in with no recommendation and us at least
coming forward with seven votes in support, they
are probably going to go with that. That is an
indication of some support somewhere.
Member Olson: As is.
Chair Marks: Right. If we vote yes on this motion,
then we have duplicated what the CFA has done and
the Mint has no indication of a recommendation. So
from there, I would imagine the Director could
make a recommendation.
Mr. Harrigal: That is correct.
Chair Marks: And the Director always does make a
recommendation. So I would think that whatever he
came up with, you know if you guys fall on the side
that timelines are important, we will probably get
whatever the Director decides.
Mr. Harrigal: We would consult with the Park after
the recommendations from the two committees and
get some feedback from them and take that data
and go to the Director and say this is what we have
to go forward with.
Chair Marks: So he might sort this out.
Mr. Harrigal: And the Director, Acting Director could

103
say we are going back to the drawing board or he
could say we are going forward with one of these
designs.
Chair Marks: So that is what happens if you vote
yes on this.
Mr. Harrigal: And also that goes to the Department
of Treasury and it would be vetted through the
Department of Treasury.
Chair Marks: Okay. I was going to say or. That is
not true.
So basically it goes to the Director. The Director is
going to decide if there will be more designs or if he
is going to let something go upstairs.
Mr. Harrigal: Correct.
Chair Marks: Okay. So we are basically giving it to
the Acting Director. We might see it back again. We
might not. So that is what your yes vote means.
So are we all clear on what is going to happen?
Okay, so if there is no further discussion, I am
going to get this vote on the record.
So all those in favor of rejecting all designs or the
Perry's Victory America the Beautiful quarter, please
raise your hand.
(Show of hands.)
Chair Marks: We have got four in support. All those
opposed, raise your hand.
(Show of hands.)
Chair Marks: Three. Okay, the motion carries four to
three. So we have essentially gone on record having
no recommendation.
So at this point, staff will take that to the Acting
Director and we will see if we see that again. Okay.
Next design to look at, I believe it is, am I correct it

104
is Great Basin? Great Basin was -- Yes, I know but I
want to make sure. Did we want to just go as is?
Okay.
Mr. Harrigal: What was the outcome?
Chair Marks: Seventeen. It is the most lop-siding of
the quarters today.
Okay, so that will take us to Fort McHenry. We have
an indication not a recommendation with design
number one with eight. So this is just like Perry's
Victory in that we don't have a recommendation. If
we just leave it where it is, there is an indication, at
least, of support towards a certain design. So are
we comfortable with that?
Member Wastweet: I am.
Chair Marks: I'm not hearing anything else. So I will
move on and let that stand. Then that takes us to
Mount
Rushmore.
We
actually
have
a
recommendation here with 11 votes for number
one. Do we need to revisit that at all?
Okay. So we are done with America the Beautiful for
2013.
That brings us now back to the Platinum Program.
Erik was good enough, thank you Erik, for doing the
tally for us. Let's have this discussion and then we
will break for lunch.
The 2012 American Eagle Platinum Coin we have a
recommendation of design number four that
received 13 of a possible 21. Second would be a
recommendation without that one at 11 for number
two.
So now I will just go down the whole row here.
Number one received nine, number two received 11,
three -- well actually we threw out three. That has
no support. Four has 13, five has four, eight has
one, nine has five, ten has three, and 11 has four.
So our recommendation as it stands right now

105
would be for the colonial figure in number four.
Mr. Weinman: Mr. Chairman, what was number
five?
Chair Marks: Number five received four.
Mr. Weinman: Okay.
Chair Marks: So are we comfortable leaving as is?
I'm not hearing anything. So we are going to leave
that as it. So we have completed the Platinum
Program.
We will go ahead and break for lunch now. When we
come back, we will be focusing the first part of the
afternoon on First Spouses, which will be an
extensive endeavor with 59 designs. So let's go out
and get something to eat, get refreshed.
And let's be back here -- We are breaking at 12:30.
I am going to ask that we are all back here in our
seats promptly at 1:30. We are recessed.
(Whereupon, at 12:29 p.m., the above-entitled
matter went off the record and resumed at 1:44
p.m.)
Review and Discuss Candidate Designs for the 2012
First Spouse Bullion Coin Program
Chair Marks: Okay. I'm going to bring this meeting
back to order. Back on the record. The next item on
the agenda is our 2012 First Spouse Coin and Medal
Program. And I think we'll look to Ron to run us
through --I guess it would be Alice Paul.
Mr. Harrigal: Yes.
Chair Marks: And before you do that, Ron, can we
go through the obverse and reverse together,
Committee? Do you want to do that? It could save
us some time in our discussion.
Mr. Harrigal: Yes, what we're going to do is, as I
present them, you'll look at the obverse in coin and

106
medal format, and then we'll look at the reverses.
We can run through the obverse and reverse in one
shot and then we can take your feedback -Chair Marks: Okay.
Mr. Harrigal: -- if you'd like to do it that way.
Chair Marks: Okay. I guess what I'm getting at is
let's look at this thing as a whole -- the whole
sculpture, if you will, with both sides. Go ahead,
Ron.
Mr. Harrigal: All right. 2012 First Spouse Gold Coin
and Medal Program. Pursuant to Public Law 109145, in 2012 the United States Mint will mint and
issue four gold bullion coins emblematic of the
spouse of each President to be honored on a
Presidential dollar coin in the same year, on the
same schedule as the Presidential One Dollar coin,
and is issued with respect to that President.
If the President has served two or more nonconsecutive periods of service Public Law 109-145
requires the Presidential One Dollar coin to be
issued in such non-consecutive periods of service,
and similarly for the spouse coin.
Okay. And also, as I said earlier, we do this in coin
and medal format. And the medal format differences
are we remove the required inscriptions that would
make it a coin.
Okay. On the obverse, the obverse design
requirements, the name and likeness of the person
who was the spouse of the President during the
President's period of service, the inscription of the
years of service in such —-- which such person was
the spouse of the President during the President's
period of service, a number indicating the order of
the period of service in which such President served.
And in the case of any President who served without
a spouse, the image of the obverse of the bullion
coin corresponds to the One Dollar coin relating to
the President shall be the image emblematic of the

107
concept of Liberty as represented in the case of
President Chester Allen Arthur by a design
incorporating the name and likeness of Alice Paul, a
leading strategist in the suffrage movement who
was instrumental in gaining women's rights to vote
upon the adoption of the Nineteenth Amendment,
and thus the ability to participate in the elections of
the future Presidents. And who was born on January
11th, 1885 during the term of President Arthur.
Each bullion coin is issued to bear the inscriptions of
the year of minting or issuance of the coin, and
such other inscriptions as the Secretary may
determine to be appropriate. Additional obverse
inscriptions include Liberty, In God We Trust, and
the year of minting.
Reverse designs. The designs of the reverse of each
coin shall bear the images emblematic of the life
and work of the First Spouse whose image is borne
on the obverse. In the case of Chester Allen Arthur,
who served without a spouse, the reverse of such
coin is to be represented -- excuse me, to be
representative
of
the
suffrage
movement.
Inscription of United States of America and
inscription of the nominal denomination of the coin,
which shall be $10.
Additional reverse inscriptions include United States
of America, E Pluribus Unum, $10, one-half ounce,
and .9999 Fine Gold.
Okay. As I said, we'll present the slides of both the - on each slide the obverse and the reverse. I'm
sorry, excuse me, the medal and the coin for that
obverse. So, we have Alice Paul.
This is the first design that we have, the coin on the
left, the medal, of course, on the right. Second
image. Third image.
Member Jansen: Ron?
Mr. Harrigal: Yes?

108
Member Jansen: Do you have the original photo art
that was provided to the artist, or anything like
that, because I wasn't that familiar with her visage.
The name, yes; the visage, no.
Mr. Harrigal: We do have those. I don't have them
for display up here, but Leslie can provide you some
of those materials.
Member Jansen: Okay, thanks.
Mr. Weinman: Do you want to clarify what these are
that they're seeing? Where they came from?
Ms. Schlager: I'd have to go through my list. Do you
want me to do that, or would you like to do that,
the source documents, some of the talking points.
I'm sorry. Actually, I'm filling in for Betty Birdsong
who is the program specialist. I worked on the
second part, the Cleveland, so I came in sort of at
the tail end. But these are source documents that
we were -- we provided to the artist for inspiration.
Member Jansen: It would be incredibly helpful if
those could be distributed to us with the drawings,
just incredibly helpful.
Mr. Harrigal: Well, I think in the case of the
Presidential Dollar Coin, we have three primary
sources. On this, it's not quite as clear. We do use - we do have sources from the -- whatever we can
get clear from the -- is it the White House that we
use, White House Historical Society?
Mr. Weinman: I want to just clarify. The images that
you see here are not necessarily public domain
images. These are -- in other words, they're for
reference purposes, to create original work. So
don't presume that when you look at these images
these are, in fact, public domain images that can be
utilized for derivative works that way.
Mr. Fishburn: But what I heard was that you would
like source materials distributed with the packets,

109
and we can endeavor to do that?
Member Jansen: Yes, especially if you're going to
distribute electronically, so that it wouldn't be any
incremental cost.
Mr. Fishburn: We will try to do that as well as
possible.
Member Jansen: Thank you.
Member Scarinci: Just a question. We're going with
-- because I didn't see that before now, but we're
going with the pictures of the spouse as they looked
when they were the First Spouse. Right?
Mr. Harrigal: That is correct. And, of course, with
Alice Paul, she was, of course, at a different time.
Member Scarinci: Right.
Mr. Harrigal: So, it would be whatever we can use in
the way of a public image that was while she was
active as a suffragette.
Member Scarinci: Right.
Mr. Weinman: But also to clarify, that's not a
requirement of legislation.
Member Scarinci: No, no, no, no. That's a criteria
that we've set -Mr. Harrigal: It's sort of like a guideline that we try
to follow.
Member Scarinci: Right. That was for consistency
with the series, exactly like the Presidential Dollars.
To this day, there remains just one exception that
the Secretary chose the Jackson $20 bill image
instead of Jackson at the time he was President.
That's the only exception so far to the Presidential
series, and I just want to be sure we're keeping
with that with the First Spouses, as well.
Mr. Harrigal: To the best we can, we do, because of

110
in the case of when you look at Frances Cleveland,
we had two sets of coins that we have to make, and
they're separated by four years. So, you could
technically have anywhere from four to twelve years
differences in age depending on whether it's the
beginning of the first term to the last of the next
term. But it's kind of hard to get photographs of -obviously, when they are famous, when the
President is in, that's where you get the
photography. You don't typically see photography
outside of those time frames.
And in this case, the official White House portraits
were not used as primary materials. Alice Paul,
Frances Cleveland, and Caroline Harrison designs
are inspired by photographs from the Library of
Congress, the Harris & Ewing Collection, First Ladies
Library, the Alice Paul Institute, Sewall-Belmont
House and Museum, the Daughters of the American
Revolution, and Wells College. So, we do assemble
quite a variety of materials for this. It's not quite as
clear as like some of the other programs. But what
we have to do is assure that we have rights on all
these images for use. Okay?
Okay. So, here we have the third image of the
obverse, the fourth, fifth, sixth image, seventh. So,
we have the seven images there shown in coin and
medal format.
Now, I assume we're going to go through the
reverse, and then we can look to try and pare them
back.
Okay. Let me go back to one here. This is just a
suffragist voting, very generic in fashion. Number
two, this is a design depicting the iconic image of
Inez Milholland Boissevain, 1886 to 1916, dressed
as Joan of Arc astride a horse leading the National
American Women's Suffrage Association parade. Ms.
Boissevain holds a banner with the inscription
"Forward Into Light." The image is long associated
with the suffragist movement.
Design Three. The design features two suffragists

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wearing suffrage banners while holding a sign,
"Votes For Women." Design four. This design
depicts a participant in the 1912 suffrage parade
held in New York City. She is holding the flag and
wearing the banner, "Votes For Women." Design
five depicts two suffragists picketing in front of the
White House. Same thing on number six, slightly
different composition. And design seven here is
another design of Inez Milholland Boissevain
inspired by the March 1913, suffrage movement
parade held in Washington, D.C. So, these are
reverse.
Chair Marks: Okay, Committee, do you have any
questions?
(No response.)
Chair Marks: I guess not.
Mr. Harrigal: Gary, I'm sorry. When the -- CFA
looked at this, they preferred design four on the
reverse.
Chair Marks: Design four on the reverse would be
the woman with the flag?
Mr. Harrigal: Yes, this one. The obverse was
number five, which let me -Chair Marks: Okay. Ron, if we could back to the -let's start with the obverse. I want to go through
our process where we see if we can identify some
designs that we all have in common that we want to
set aside, so we can better focus our discussion.
So, we have interest in image number one. I do.
We'll keep that. Number two? No interest. Number
three? Number four? Interested in that. Okay.
Number five?
(Chorus of yeses.)
Chair Marks: Number six? No on six. Number
seven?

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(Chorus of yeses.)
Chair Marks: Yes? Okay. So, I've got images two,
three and six that we set aside.
We've got four images left to look at, one, four,
five, and seven. Okay? So, if we can focus our
discussion on that. We can do our discussion one of
two ways. We could go through and do these
obverse ones first, or we could pair them up and
pair our discussion at the same time.
Member Wastweet: Pair.
Chair Marks: Heidi is shaking her head to pair, so I
think I'm leaning that way, too. Why don't we then - let's work through the reverse designs and let's
see which ones we want to -Member Scarinci: There's usually more discussion
about the reverse than the obverse.
Chair Marks: But in the vein of what you've always
talked about coins should be about both faces.
Member Scarinci: Both faces.
Chair Marks: So, if we could go to number one, is
there interest in looking at number one? I'm seeing
no interest. Number two, any interest?
PARTICIPANT: Yes.
Chair Marks: Yes. Interest in number three? No
interest. Four?
(Chorus of yeses.)
Chair Marks: Five? No on five. Number six? No on
six. Stop me if I go too fast. Number seven? No
interest in number seven. That leaves us -- well,
this will make it simple, folks. We've got two images
to consider on the reverse. We've got number two
and number four. Okay? So, let's start our
discussion. And I'm going to ask each member to
pair up their conversations, not necessarily that you

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need to say that the two match well, but give us at
least your comments on both the obverse and the
reverse.
And I'll just say this, that on the obverses,
sometimes we get into a bit of subjectivity. And
there are some images, for example, for myself, I
can look at and I can say I like that one, and I don't
like that. And I guess I don't have a real concrete
reason, it's just my own sensibilities that I like one
more than the other.
So, if that's the case, just go ahead and say what
you like. If you have a concrete thought about why
one is better than the other, why one should be
picked, certainly vocalize that, but don't feel like
you need to spend a lot of time on the obverses if
you just have an intuitive desire for one over the
other. Just tell us what that is, and then we can
move the process maybe a little quicker.
So, with that, is there anyone who wants to start?
Okay. Go ahead, Michael.
Member Bugeja: I'll make this short. What I looked
for in the obverse was character. Number five has
that character I was looking for. On all sorts of
portraits I look mostly in the eyes, and what do the
eyes convey. In 1805, we have conviction, a little
weariness, but I think it really encapsulated her life.
I also favor seven, but not to the extent of
character that I find in five. And if I had to pair
them up, interestingly, I would pair up five with two
of the reverse, and I'd pair up seven with four of the
reverse.
The reasons why, both two and four have that
motion and movement that I have been looking for
in coins. Two also has orientation coming out of that
coin. The conviction of Alice Paul in five doesn't
necessarily need to be echoed by the conviction in
number four, but the conviction in -- the lesser
conviction in number seven does need to be paired
up with the reverse of number four. Those are my
comments.

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Chair Marks: Okay. Thank you, Michael. Let's go to
Erik.
Member Jansen: On the obverses, I had the same
intention to try to find the look, the feel, the
character. Obviously, this woman fought an uphill
battle for a long time, so I also did not want her to
look opulent. By that I mean no pearls, no fancy
earrings. I want this woman to look like a street
fighter.
And my favorite is five. I think one could work. I
think Item Seven has an element of youth which I'm
not sure I want. I like the subtle way that the
shoulder goes --on number five, that the shoulder
goes over the letter T. There's something about it
which it shows me -- just tells me that her shoulder
is fighting it's way out of the circle it's supposed to
be in. And it's a cue that my eye picks up on.
I would ask those that are into historical curation
and so forth, her -- the neckline of whatever she's
wearing is very, very simple. Too simple, too simple
for the times? I don't know.
When I come to the reverses, it was interesting that
we're down to two and four. And my number one
thing here was what is the icon of the suffragette?
And excuse me for not knowing that image number
two was that. It looked very medieval to me, and I
rejected it as that.
When you look at how they coin up, I think the
proof version of number four will be striking, no pun
intended, because of the contrast of the woman's
profile with the flag. So, therefore, in the margin I
go for number four.
Chair Marks: Okay, Heidi.
Member Wastweet: On the obverses, I don't have a
strong preference between these. I think any of
these would be fine. I kind of like the character of
the hat. I think that is something that she wore a
lot.

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Member Jansen: If I may add one thing that I
meant to. The best rendition from the photographs
looked like it would be - excuse me - one or five.
Those look like the best renditions.
Chair Marks: You know, I've noticed -- Erik, I'm not
going to put you on the spot but I've noticed that
we've done this a time or two today, various
members. When one member is in the middle of
their explanations, I'd ask that the rest of us hold
our thoughts. And if you want to be recognized after
that member is done, why don't you slip in at that
point and let me know. But I'd like to give each
member some uninterrupted time. So, Heidi, if you
could continue.
Member Wastweet: Okay. So, even though I like the
one with the hat, her nose seems too wide to me,
and I don't know if that is something that the
sculptors would correct, or if they are obligated to
stay with the artwork. Don, how do you feel about
that?
Mr. Everhart: It really depends on the individual
drawing, and what reference we have. I would have
to see the reference the artist used on this one to
make a determination on that. But I can see a plain
break coming down the right side of the nose there,
which would indicate to me that it would be rounded
off at that point. I'd have to see a picture of her at
that time to really make a call on that.
Member Wastweet: Just a little wide at this point.
Mr. Everhart: At the bottom.
Member Wastweet: Yes.
Mr. Everhart: Oh, okay. Yes, I'd have to see -- I'm
not that familiar with her.
Member Wastweet: Okay. Number five I think is a
nice drawing and like Erik said, it gets the attitude
across, or was that Michael? For coinability, though,
I'm leaning towards seven. This one is going to

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translate the best to medal, in my opinion. While
five is a lovely drawing, I think seven would make a
better medal, so I'm leaning toward there. But
we're actually going to be fine with whichever one
we choose. There's no bad choice here.
Chair Marks: Okay.
Member Wastweet: On the reverse, number two. It
may have been iconic in its time, and that has some
value. I'm inclined to agree it looks medieval and, of
course, it was supposed to at the time. It could be
misinterpreted. And the fourth woman in the
background is very, very small, which I think we're
always uncomfortable when people become too
small with that much detail in it.
I like number four for its simplicity; not only
simplicity, but it has a fluidness, it has a good
composition sensibility. She's definitely got motion
in her stride, a nice curl to the flag without being
exaggerated. I think this is my top choice so far.
That's it.
Chair Marks: Michael?
Member Moran: On the obverse, I went into Google
Images and actually was able to date a couple of
these, and that probably drove my choice. The one
with her in the hat was 1914, which was early in the
battle in terms of when it really got tough for her.
And number seven was done in 1930 after it was
over. And I like the comments everybody has made,
but at the end of my thought process I came down
to the fact that in 1930, here's an experienced
woman who has seen it all, knew what it took in
terms of dedication and sacrifice to make it happen.
And I think that comes out in the drawing. And I
like the way the face is turned, the position of the
shoulders. That's my favorite.
On the reverse, I did not understand the allegory
either, I do now. But still, number four is by far the
better one. The design is simple, it's got motion, it's
what we want.

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Chair Marks: Reverse?
PARTICIPANT: He said four.
Chair Marks: Oh, four. Gotcha. Okay, go ahead.
Member Scarinci: I agree, number four is a nobrainer. I don't really see any other choice. It's got - as was said before, it's got motion, it's got
simplicity, it's got all the things we ask for.
In terms of the obverse, my only no would be
number four because we're doing a hat on the
reverse. I don't think we should be doing a hat on
the obverse. And I also don't think we should have
people focus their attention on a hat instead of the
person. And I think you can't not look at this hat. I
mean, it's a cool hat. So, I think anything but
number four. And as between the anything, I think
it's a tough call between five and seven.
Chair Marks: Okay. Thanks, Donald. I come down
between five and seven, also. I'm not going to
illuminate any of you on one or the other. And I just
like those both, and we'll see which one prevails.
On the reverse, number two with the cape and the
clothing that could possibly strike one as medieval,
it just takes on the Joan of Arc look. So, I think for
the person who might by chance look at this and
not have a whole lot of knowledge about what
they're looking at, I think it could be a somewhat
confusing image for them. And I think it's important
that since this was put in the legislation that the
image that's picked really does convey the message
that was intended in the legislation.
So, that's why I think number four is the best. Not
only does it convey that image or that message,
excuse me, of the suffragist, but it also, I think -- I
was going to use that word "striking," a very
striking image. Here again I'll go back to the proof,
this figure being the raised object, I would think
that that would be the frosted, and you're going to
have a lot of mirror on the background. And I think

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it's going to be very stunning because of that
contrast, and it's going to have a lot of pop. So, I'm
split between the two images for the obverse and
definitely in favor of number four for the reverse.
Michael?
Member Olson: Just real quick, five on the obverse,
and four or two on the reverse. No further
comment.
Chair Marks: Okay. That brings us to the end of
Alice Paul. There were tally sheets, new ones
passed out to you before the session started, so
please feel free to go ahead and start marking
those.
Member Jansen: Hey, Gary?
Chair Marks: Yes?
Member Jansen: I have a question for Don. Would it
be possible in image four, this is the marching
suffragette with the flag, to also give proof
treatment to the "Votes For Women" on the banner?
It's just a thought.
Mr. Everhart: Well, I'm afraid it would look like
you'd be able to see through her.
Member Jansen: Yes.
Mr. Everhart: It would pop that out for sure, but I
think it would still be legible if it was recessed and
had texture in it, and it would still read pretty well.
Member Jansen: Okay. Yes, if you could recess it
and -Mr. Everhart: I mean, you could do that, what
you're saying, polish it.
Member Jansen: But with Gary's comments that for
reasons that this was specified out of the normal in
the legislation, I think we would maybe do the
process right by really making it blatant, just really
make it very clear what this is about.

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(Simultaneous speaking.)
Member Jansen: Stunning. I think striking?
Mr. Everhart: Well, no, stunning. I mean put those
letters in proof, or in -Member Jansen: Something so that there's at least
some contrast against the -Mr. Harrigal: I mean, one thing that we have to
watch here is when we typically infuse the lettering
and polish on the banner, it's typically in a flat
arrangement. And here you're following the contour
of her body as you go around from one end to the
other, so it's going to be a bit tricky. That whole -the "Votes For Women" letters will not all be at field
level so it's going to be tough to do that from a
technical perspective because you're following a
contour.
Member Jansen: How do you do a reverse proof
which is nothing but that process?
Mr. Harrigal: That has to be done by hand.
Member Jansen: Okay.
Mr. Harrigal: That's -- I mean, this program,
technically we could do that by hand. It's something
we have to consider.
Member Jansen: Yes, it's not that many working
dies.
Mr. Harrigal: No, it is not.
Chair Marks: Okay. At this point, I think we're ready
to go ahead and look at Frances Cleveland first
term.
Mr. Harrigal: Okay. There's seven obverse
candidates to go through here, and I'll just go
through these in general here.
Incidentally, the fact that she was the youngest

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First Lady, age 21, and also the dates on the coin
span three years instead of four, 1886-1889,
because that's when she was spouse, at that point.
That is design number two, three, four, five, six,
and seven.
On to the reverses, we have 10 candidate reverse
designs for term one. Designs one through six are
based on the first narrative that we developed, the
Saturday receptions and the working class, so we'll
go through those first here.
This is design one on the reception, design two,
three, four, five and six. And design seven is based
on our second narrative, which was popularity with
the public.
This design was inspired by Frances Cleveland's
immense popularity, depicts a young woman having
her hair styled in the same likeness as Frances
Cleveland. In addition, the woman who is styling her
hair sports a similar Frances Cleveland hairstyle.
Design eight is based on popularity with the public,
narrative number two. Design depicts the First Lady
joining the President in an unprecedented tour of
the South and West in 1887. In this design, the First
Lady is seen stepping out onto the platform of the
Presidential private railway car at the train station.
President Cleveland is obviously in the background.
Design nine is based on narrative number two,
popularity with the public. This design shows
Frances Cleveland waving to the crowd during one
of the train stops in the 1887 grand tour. And
number ten, also popularity with the public,
narrative number two. This design was inspired by a
photograph of Frances Cleveland posing for a bas
relief sculpt by Augustus Saint-Gaudens.
Chair Marks: Is that supposed to be Saint-Gaudens?
Mr. Harrigal: Yes. And he's actually sculpting on that
pallette, and not painting. So, we have the reverse
designs here.

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Chair Marks: Okay. Thank you. Any questions
before we jump in?
Member Wastweet: I have a question?
Chair Marks: Go ahead.
Member Wastweet: On the Frances Cleveland
second term, we also have her on the railway car.
And, Ron, you mentioned earlier, we may want to -or we're free to swap first and second term.
Mr. Harrigal: Yes.
Member Wastweet: Shall we do them all at the
same time?
Chair Marks: Committee, do you want to do all
Frances Cleveland's together?
Member Jansen: It gets to be an awful lot.
Chair Marks: But maybe at least the reverses?
Member Jansen: We have to pick two. Right?
Chair Marks: What's that?
Member Wastweet: We could do the obverse -Member Jansen: We have to select two.
Chair Marks: Yes.
Member Wastweet: Let's do the obverses together,
and then the reverses together.
Chair Marks: I think they tried to do the obverses to
reflect a different age period. Right?
Mr. Harrigal: Yes.
Chair Marks: The reverses we could mix up,
however.
Mr. Harrigal: Yes. And there is overlap on the
reverses.

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Chair Marks: So, why don't we just look at the -Mr. Weinman: The other thing to keep in mind it's
possible there might be some time sensitive
designs. In other words, if there's some event that
happened the second term, and it's associated with
the second term, it might be inappropriate to put it
arbitrarily in the first term.
Chair Marks: If that's the case then we should -Mr. Harrigal: Yes, the actual train scenes on
popularity with the public on the second reverse
was based on Mrs. Cleveland's Whistle Stop Tour of
the second term, so that actual design was based in
photography from something during the second
term.
Member Wastweet: Okay, so that was a second trip.
It's not the same train?
Mr. Harrigal: Correct.
Member Wastweet: Okay.
Chair Marks: Heidi, are you good with just looking
at what we've got for the first term?
Member Wastweet: Yes, I'm good with that.
Chair Marks: All right. Okay, so -- Erik, did you have
a question?
Member Jansen: No.
Chair Marks: Okay. Then let's go through our
process, and we'll go through the obverses one at a
time. And let's identify those that we would like to
have further consideration.
Number one, is there interest in number one?
(Chorus of yeses.)
Chair Marks: Yes. Interest in number two? Okay,
no. Interest in number three?

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PARTICIPANT: Yes.
Chair Marks: Four? Okay, we'll put four aside.
Number five?
(Chorus of yeses.)
Chair Marks: Number six? Setting six aside. And
number seven?
PARTICIPANT: Yes.
Mr. Harrigal: And, incidentally, the CFA preferred
design number seven on the obverse, and number
five on the reverse.
Chair Marks: Okay. So, we've set aside two, four,
and six. We're left with one, three, five, and seven,
all the odd numbers. So, now let's look at -- let's
take up the reverses, same process.
Reverse number one, is there interest in that one?
PARTICIPANT: Yes.
Chair Marks: Reverse number two? Hearing none.
Number three?
PARTICIPANT: Yes.
Chair Marks: Yes. Number four? Hearing none.
Number five?
(Chorus of yeses.)
Chair Marks: Six? Take that as a no. Number seven?
That's a no. Number eight?
PARTICIPANT: Yes.
Chair Marks: Number nine? That's a no. Number
ten? No interest in number ten. Okay, so we're left
with -- the ones we kept were one, three, five, and
eight. So, if we could focus our discussions on those
designs, that will help us move through this process
in a thoughtful yet expeditious manner.

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Is there anyone who wishes to start with Mrs.
Cleveland? Erik, you want to go ahead.
Member Jansen: Yes. All right. So, I think the point
has been made we're picking the younger of two
instantiations of her. As I look at the seven here,
the best rendition is number seven, number three,
and that was kind of my take on them.
Number one is not too far off, and probably -- I felt
like it might coin pretty well, simple neckline and
all. But my favorite is seven. It is about the only
one that's a good rendition that strikes me as
fulfilling the description "young and popular."
On the reverse, when I first looked at these, I was
taken with -- on number one -- I was taken with
kind of the energy and the message, and it just
looks like a social gathering with a leader even
though she has her back to us, being involved. And,
of course, that was one of the narratives.
As I went through this, I really, really liked the
energy, even though it's static, Michael, not moving
energy. I really like the energy in five. These are all
very busy drawings, and it's going to be a
challenge, I think.
I didn't like the portrait of her in number four. Just
trying to find simplicity here, and I didn't know
whether the historical appropriateness rule hats in
or out, or arbitrary, but I'm kind of trying to
understand four versus five, even though we ruled Chair Marks: Tossed four out.
Member Jansen: Yes, I know we did, because I
think I want to be on five. It's the better of the two.
So, I'm between one and five.
Chair Marks: Are you done?
Member Jansen: Finis.
Chair Marks: Michael.

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Member Bugeja: I'll be very quick. I just looked at
the obverse, Gary, and I like the character in
number five. My preference is for the youth and
allure of number seven.
As for the reverses, I'm fine with any of the
finalists, except I wanted to point out that on
number eight on the train, I think I might be right in
this. I haven't researched it, but it may be the first
time we have a First Lady and the President on the
same coin. Is there another one?
Mr. Harrigal: I think we've had them before.
Chair Marks: Yes, I think so.
Mr. Harrigal: I can't say for sure.
Member Bugeja: We had them both together, and
did we have one in front of the other -Chair Marks: Wasn't there a marriage scene?
Member Bugeja: It's very interesting to me -- this is
a very interesting photograph for me from a
journalist political perspective, because it kind of
showed you that the First Lady was more popular
than the President. And even the way it was drawn,
it was to that effect.
I just wanted to point out that I guess from a
journalist perspective, here you've got the hats of
the journalists I think on the bottom there, and
they're paying attention to Frances. I kind of like
that. That's it.
Chair Marks: Okay. Michael?
Member Olson: Yes, real quick. Number seven I
think depicts her in the best light, so that would be
one I would support for the obverse.
On the reverse, I do not understand why we're still
seeing pictures of the back of people. And it's
especially glaring when the subject of the picture
that we're looking at is the one with their back to us

126
in many of these designs. It's distracting enough
when it's a supporting character, but when it's the
main character, I just -- I do not understand why
we'd want to see the back of that person. I would
think we'd want to see their face.
That fact eliminates a lot of these designs in my
view. That's the reason why I felt that number three
should be considered. It does show, essentially, the
same scene that we're looking at here, but we're
not looking at the back of anybody, much less the
subject that we're trying to honor. Number three
gets my strongest interest for that fact.
Number eight, with the train scene, I looked at that
and it just kind of appeared to me that the
gentleman standing behind the lady there was
sneaking up on her. So, I think there's probably
some better choices than that, but those are my
thoughts.
Chair Marks: Thank you, Michael.
On the obverse, I like the youth of number seven.
For the reverse, I'll expand a little bit more. Number
one is interesting, I think mainly because of the
style in which it's rendered. It's got kind of a muted
look which imparts to it more of an antique feel that
maybe gives it a little more romanticism, but I don't
think that when you transfer that onto a coin it's
going to look the same way. It's going to look very
different than what you're looking at here.
I agree with my friend, Michael, that we should be
done with looking at backsides of people. I don't
know if we want to render the backside of the First
Lady, so that one I will encourage my colleagues to
not support.
Number three doesn't have much energy in it. It
just strikes me as a little plastic, and the figures are
farther away than some of these other options we
have, so we lose some of the -- there's nothing
dramatic about it.

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Five has that energy that I'm talking about. We're
not really looking at the backside of the First Lady
here, kind of somewhat getting to be a little bit of a
severe profile, but from kind of the back of her
shoulder, but I still think it works. The energy
imparted in the faces of the young ladies that are
meeting her is evident. The images are large
enough that you can see it readily at a first glance
and understand that this is a scene of some folks
meeting someone. And I think in a proof version,
this is going to be a real clean presentation with a
lot of open field around it; yet, we've still filled up
the pallette in a very pleasant way. So, I strongly
support number five.
Number eight, I like what Michael said about the
journalistic point of view, and the politics involved
here, but there's still just something -- it doesn't
grab me for some reason. I'm sorry I can't
articulate that any better. So, I'm with number
seven on the obverse, number five on the reverse.
Donald?
Member Scarinci: Yes, it's hard to get excited about
this, so, I mean, I could go along with seven on the
obverse, five on the reverse, no passion to my
opinion. I'm easily swayed.
Chair Marks: Go ahead, Michael.
Member Moran: Number three is the photograph
from her engagement. I think it's well done. I think
that the sculptor designer got it right on number
five in terms of the tilt of the head. I like it, as well.
I do not like -- I know I'm swimming against the
water here, but I do not like number seven for the
simple fact that I felt like the tilt of the head was
not what I saw in the photographs, and that was
why I dismissed it. So, I'm between three and five,
probably vote for three and lose my points.
On the back, I think it's clear that number five is it.
I think that number eight deserves a little bit of
criticism, constructive criticism, for the simple
reason that you can't tell it's a pale car, and you

128
have four basically floating derby hats down at the
bottom. And it just doesn't jump out and get the
storyline right because of that. So my vote on the
reverse is number five.
Chair Marks: Okay. Heidi?
Member Wastweet: For the obverse, I don't have a
strong preference. I think one, and three, and seven
would all be fine. Number five, I feel her facial
features are not as accurate. I don't like number
five. I'm sorry, Michael, so no strong preference
between one, three, and seven.
On the reverse, number one, Gary is correct, this
would not show up on the coin like it does on the
drawing with fading curtains in the background, so
there's no division between the polish and the frost.
And that, of course, doesn't work. This is not a high
relief metal that you could do that. This is intended
to be a proof coin, so that's not going to work.
Number three, so much going on in the background.
There's no designation for polish. She's known for
meeting the young working girls, but the woman
that she's shaking hands with -- which one is
supposed to be the First Lady, the one on the left or
the right?
Mr. Harrigal: The left.
Member Wastweet: Yes. And then the one on the
right looks like a much older woman, not like a
young working girl. And no energy. So, number five
has a better composition than number four, which
we already rejected.
The trouble here is some fuss was made about her
hairstyle and how everyone copied it, but her
hairstyle is not in this picture. And the girl that she's
meeting is not sporting her hairstyle either, so
that's some inaccuracies that I would hope could be
corrected, because otherwise I think this is
garnering a lot of support among the Committee
members here. I would move to change that if we

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adopt that one.
Number eight, I like the idea of this. It's drawn well.
True, it doesn't look like the back of a train car. I'm
not sure that's important or not. The hats are a bit
obscure. I think for the subject matter, I think I
prefer the one that we're going to see for the
second term, so I'm going to pass this one for that
reason. So, that leaves us back with five with the
incorrect hairstyle, so I can't really approve it, but
maybe with a motion to change that.
Chair Marks: Okay. That brings us to the end of
Mrs. Cleveland first term. So, go ahead and when
you're ready mark your preferences on the tally
sheet. And let's have Ron walk us through the
Caroline Harrison designs.
Mr. Harrigal: Okay. I do want to mention that we
did talk about the President and the spouse being
on the coin in the past, that Julia Tyler coin when
we did that has the President and the Spouse
dancing. At least that one for sure. I can't tell on
some of these others, but that's definitely one.
Okay, Caroline Harrison candidate obverse designs.
Caroline Harrison was the spouse of President
Benjamin Harrison who served as President from
1889 to 1893. Mrs. Harrison was born on October
1st, 1832 and died at the White House from
tuberculosis complications on October 25th, 1892.
Okay. As a result, the date range on her design
ends one year before her husband's term of the
office expired.
So, we have seven obverse designs, design one,
two, three, four, five, six and seven.
Chair Marks: What was the CFA choice?
Mr. Harrigal: And CFA choice was design five.
Member Moran: Ron, did they do that because they
decided everything is being profiled?

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Mr. Harrigal: They did make a lot of comments
about making sure that profiles -- at least in the
portfolio, and in this case they did reference it being
profile was stronger. Sometimes they don't.
Sometimes we have profiles but they don't pick
them, but they do generally make comments when
we don't include a profile in the portfolio.
Okay, the reverse designs. Of the nine candidate
reverse designs represented of Mrs. Harrison's love
for china painting and her work organizing the
White House china.
Okay. So, we have White House china featured on
designs number one. This is our narrative number
two. So, for designs one and two, this is design one
showing the White House china from when Mrs.
Harrison was there. We have the White House china
from Harrison on the front, Monroe in the back on
the right, and Lincoln center left of the design. So,
those are the three that are -- White House china is
represented there.
This is design two. The design depicts Mrs. Harrison
identifying china from past administrations. Design
three is based on narrative number one, china
painting. This design depicts Mrs. Harrison's
painting an orchid china pattern. Design four, again
based on narrative number one, this design depicts
a closeup of Mrs. Harrison carefully painting an
orchid on the china. Design five depicts a closeup of
the orchid and paintbrushes. Design six, this design
depicts a closeup of Harrison's hand as she paints a
pansy on china. Design seven, again based on
narrative number one, this design features First
Lady showing her students how to paint using china.
Design eight, based on narrative number one, this
design depicts a closeup of Mrs. Harrison's hand
carefully painting an orchid on the surface of the
china. Design nine, again based on narrative
number one, this design depicts Mrs. Harrison
explaining the china painting to her students. In the
background is a prominent natural design motif that
visually defines the time period that Harrison lived

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in the White House. So, there you have it, nine
designs.
Chair Marks: Okay, let's start with the obverse, and
let's identify those that we want to consider further.
Obverse number one, is there interest in one?
PARTICIPANT: Yes.
Chair Marks: Number two?
PARTICIPANT: Yes.
Chair Marks: Yes. Number three? No on three. And
four? No on four. Number five?
(Chorus of yeses.)
Chair Marks: Six? Nothing on six. And on seven?
Okay. So, we've just eliminated three, four, six, and
seven, leaving us with three images, one, two, and
five for the obverse.
So, now we will move to the reverse. Number one?
(Chorus of yeses.)
Chair Marks: Two? I hear nothing on two. Number
three? None on three. Four?
PARTICIPANT: Yes.
Chair Marks: Five?
PARTICIPANT: Yes.
Chair Marks: Yes, for me. Six?
PARTICIPANT: Yes.
Chair Marks: Yes?
PARTICIPANT: Yes.
Chair Marks: Seven? No on seven. I will say yes on
eight. Nine?
PARTICIPANT: Yes.

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Chair Marks: Okay. So, we've just set aside two,
three, and seven. And we will be looking at one,
four, five, six, eight, and nine. Okay. So, at this
point I'll circle back to the obverses, and I'll take
the liberty of starting this discussion.
Of the three images that we're left with here for the
obverse, I simply like number one. I know that
doesn't contribute a lot, but I like number one.
The reverses are interesting. I guess the first thing I
want to know, maybe the staff can enlighten us, is
the china theme the only one that you have?
Mr. Harrigal: We had the two themes here that were
based on china, the White House china, and also the
painting of china.
Chair Marks: But it's all about china.
Mr. Harrigal: Yes.
Chair Marks: Is there anything else in her history?
I'm not a historian. If there's not, there's not, but
I'm just curious.
Mr. Harrigal: I mean, she was only there for three
years, of course. No, those are the only narratives
we have for her.
Chair Marks: All right.
Mr. Harrigal: I know we reviewed these, and we
vetted these narratives at least once.
Chair Marks: Okay. I want to talk a little bit about -this is a word I've used often here, "story board."
And we've tossed out some of the story board ones
where we've got -- like number seven that we
tossed out was kind of a story board where we're
looking at a moment in the life of. Same with
number two, checking out the china, that sort of
thing. And I've never felt that those were the best
ways to honor a First Spouse and their
contributions. And I much prefer, if we can find
some sort of symbolism or some simple device that

133
relays the idea of whatever the subject was that
was important to that First Spouse, First Lady, while
she was in the White House.
So, we're giving the china theme, and I think, first
of all, I asked for number eight to be included
because this one just kind of -- it struck me a little - I mean, it's getting to what I'm talking about, but
I don't know why, but when I saw this I thought of
painting the roses red. You're familiar with that in
Alice in Wonderland? So, I don't know. That's the
only reason I put that in there. I wanted to just
bring that out, compared to number five.
Number five, I really, really like this. It shows the
orchid that she would have painted, perhaps, on a
piece of china, and it gives you the symbolism of
the paintbrushes without giving you a frame from a
comic strip or some sort of story, picture story
series of pictures that you might see. So, I am
throwing, I think, all of my support behind number
five.
The others are interesting illustrations, but I'm not
really sure that they really do a whole lot for me.
So, with that, who's -- do you want to go, Mike? Go
ahead.
Member Olson: Yes, I want to echo what Gary has
just said, but I'm going to make one minor
suggestion as an addition. I think number one will
get my support for the obverse. Number five is a
very excellent choice for a reverse, in my view. But
in reading the narrative, I'd suggest maybe the Mint
make one small addition to that. It says here that
her signature was a tiny four-leaf clover. What a
great way to personalize that design if that is her
work, put a little privy mark, a little four-leaf clover
in there, and you'd have something that was very
unique, and would mean something not only to her
family, but to collectors. They would wonder what
that was, and maybe be compelled to do a little
research. I think that would be a nice gesture if the
design selected is one that depicts her artwork.

134
That's all my comments.
Chair Marks: Michael?
Member Bugeja: I'll be brief again, one or five for
the obverse were my first choices. Either one would
work for me. I was much more inclined to look at
the reverses. And what I considered was the canvas
of the coin itself being almost the plate that she
wrote on, so we don't get plays within plays, or
dishes within disks. And in that regard number five,
by far, was my first choice because it really not only
symbolizes what she -- I really like your idea, Mike,
about the clover. But, I mean, it is the dish itself. I
just find it alluring and beautiful.
Chair Marks: Okay, Erik?
Member Jansen: On the observe, I'm okay with one
or five. There is one issue I have with five, however,
and that is the way the hair braid, or a band, or
something gives her a bit of the look of a horn out
the back of her head. And I just would want to be
careful on how that coins up and renders. So, when
you look at the 05 rendering, it kind of looks like a
horn coming out of the back of her head.
Mr. Harrigal: Yes, I believe that's a comb in her
hair.
Member Jansen: I think that's a better choice of
words than I had. It looks like a horn to me. So, I
prefer one or five with that proviso.
On the reverse, you guys have really got my head
going differently here. I have not come with that
thought, Gary. And I'm sure that's probably why the
CFA chose number one. I find that kind of without
much -- I don't know. It doesn't do much for me,
when I look at five, and it does.
Eight, it's a little bit more contrived. Five is pretty
abstract. You kind of may have to know the story.
Quite honestly, I could live with five, or six, or nine.
That's all.

135
Chair Marks: Thank you, Erik. Heidi?
Member Wastweet: While it may seem to us a bit
trivial to memorialize china, nonetheless, china
painting was her passion, and I respect that. And I
think it is important because she created instead of
just -- I think the cataloguing of the china was a bit
secretarial, but her painting of the china was her
creating, and it was her passion, and I can get
behind that.
What baffles me here is this woman practically
designed her own medal, and we didn't use it. She
was known for a particular plate with an orchid on
it, and it's not here. It would have been so simple to
take that plate and put it in this circle. And I have it
on my phone if you want to pass this around and
look. This is her orchid, this is her plate, put in this
circle. It's the simplest thing in the world, and we're
not seeing it, and I don't understand that.
So, number five, while it's close, it is not her orchid.
It's an orchid, but it's not her orchid. Number one is
the china that she picked out, but it's not the china
she created. And number eight is not her orchid.
Mr. Weinman: This is a point of clarification. I
believe it actually is her orchid, just not from a
plate. It's from a postcard she did, I believe.
Member Wastweet: But it's not her orchid plate.
Mr. Weinman: And you've had that, and you just let
us all sit here and make fools of ourselves.
(Laughter.)
Mr. Weinman: This is the reverse.
Member Jansen: That's gorgeous. It's gorgeous.
Chair Marks: Are you done?
Member Wastweet: Would you like me to repeat
that?

136
Chair Marks: Are you done?
Member Wastweet: I mean, I could comment on the
others. I think as a second choice, I like number
one, which is the CFA choice. It's interesting, but
yes, I've spoken my piece.
Chair Marks: Okay. I'm going to explore this just a
little bit. Is there any way that can become an
option?
Mr. Harrigal: Well, I think if it's the recommendation
of the Committee, they would consider it.
Chair Marks: It
straightforward --

seems

very

simple,

it's

a

Mr. Harrigal: We'd have to check and make sure
there aren't any rights -Chair Marks: Yes, this is the first this has ever come
to my attention, or our attention, which means yes,
the question is who owns the rights on this? Does
anybody own rights on this? Is it protected in some
way? Who has possession of it? These are all things
that I can't give you an answer sitting here at the
table.
(Background noise.)
Mr. Weinman: This is a good reason not to -Mr. Harrigal: Late in the afternoon is -Member Wastweet: I think the meeting just fell
apart.
Mr. Weinman: It's the dramatic hamster.
Chair Marks: Yes, I think we have to ban iPads in a
meeting.
Mr. Weinman: Let the record reflect -- no.
Chair Marks: Okay.
Mr.

Weinman:

The

bottom

line

is,

if

this

is

137
something that if requested we're happy to look
into. I just can't give you -- obviously, I can't give
you an answer sitting here today.
Chair Marks: Okay. So, there's nothing stopping us
as a Committee to say we're going to add to the
reverse choices a number ten.
Mr. Fishburn: That would require - since that design
has not been reviewed by the Commission on Fine
Arts, it would require a submission of that design to
them.
Mr. Harrigal: I think the other thing we could look at
it is, perhaps, is there one of these designs where
we could insert that image into it?
Member Scarinci: Oh, yes, that's a good way.
Mr. Harrigal: Like this design here, you could insert
that image into it.
Chair Marks: You could do it with number five.
Member Scarinci: Just correct the orchid, just
correct it. That's all.
Mr. Harrigal: So, if the Committee so choose to
recommend this design, substituting the orchid from
the plate on it.
Member Wastweet: That's possible you wouldn't
have her decorative border around it.
Mr. Harrigal: You could also put that in there, too, if
you wanted to.
Member Wastweet: Okay.
Chair Marks: Yes. I think what we're suggesting is
that the plate as she has rendered it on her phone
there be inserted in where the orchid is now.
Correct?
Member Wastweet: I'd be fine with that motion,
yes.

138
Chair Marks: Okay. So, for all of us who might be
inclined that way, maybe I should suggest that we
do not add a number ten, but that we would support
number five knowing that we would have a motion
subsequent to the tally to support that idea. Thank
you, Heidi.
So, I think we're ready to move to Mike.
Member Wastweet: Would we have trouble with -what's the word -- crediting the artist who drew
this, and then telling them to draw this? Is that a
problem? I don't have a problem with it. I'm just
asking legal.
Mr. Weinman: I mean, do we have —-- we always
have the right to move designs around. We own the
designs; therefore, we can move them in and out. It
doesn't mean that it's necessarily appropriate. And,
once again, make whatever recommendations
keeping in mind that if we're creating a new design,
that could create issues for us that we need to
examine. And you're right, even if we fundamentally
change this design in a way that's so different, it
might need to be represented to CFA another time.
But I don't -- if I could recommend, I have no -obviously, I have no issue with making any motion
or giving any recommendations that you have. And
we promise to look into them, but you may also
want to examine the designs that are on the table
right now.
And I'll just mention, keep in mind this is a 2012
program, and there is more of a time concern in this
one, even more so than some of the other
programs.
Chair Marks: Okay. All right. Mike?
Member Moran: Okay. On the obverse, bless her
heart, she sure is -- I would -- number five presents
her in the best light because she just is not a very
handsome lady to me. And that's the only reason I
would choose five in profile over the other two,
matter of personal taste.

139
Turning to the reverse, Heidi has already destroyed
that discussion. I have a couple of comments to
make on it. First, assuming we -- you basically won
me over. My first choice when I looked at these was
number one because it wasn't a story board, and
yet it covered the history of the key changes in the
china service for the White House, really important
ones, and I like that.
But then listening to the discussion, I certainly can
go with five. I would suggest one change in it,
because you've got the paintbrush underneath the
petal of the lily. If it's going to be an actual design
from a plate, that paintbrush is laying on the plate,
so it would be over that lily petal. So, that needs to
be changed.
And the last suggestion I have is if we all have our
way and we redesign this, I think Heidi should take
it to CFA and present it.
(Laughter.)
Chair Marks: Okay. Thank you, Mike. Donald?
Member Scarinci: I yielded my time to the dramatic
hamster, but in response to Heidi's presentation and
discovery, I think we should do something to modify
five to accommodate it. I would vote for that. I was
going with five anyway, even before that, so five as
modified.
On the obverse, I could go with either one or two.
And I think -- I know CFA likes profiles. They've
made that as clear as we have made that we like
facing front or side faces in these coins. The series
is mostly —-- is almost all facing front or threequarters left, three-quarters right, it's not profile.
So, I think we should stick with that, and choose
either one or two, and go with five as modified.
Chair Marks: Thank you, Donald. Okay. I believe
that brings us to conclusion of the Harrison designs.
Mark your sheets, please, and we'll now move on
Frances Cleveland, second term.

140
Mr. Harrigal: Okay. Frances Cleveland, second term
designs. Frances Cleveland reentered the White
House in 1893. Her husband was elected a second
non-consecutive term. We have five candidate
obverse designs for term two. Design one, two,
design three, design four, design five.
On the reverse, design one is based on narrative
number two, popularity with the public, second
term. Frances Cleveland's popularity created many
opportunities for her to be photographed by both
professional photographers and the public. This
design is inspired by the many photographs taken of
Frances Cleveland.
Design two, popularity with the public, second term.
This design is inspired by President and Mrs.
Cleveland's Whistle Stop Tour during the second
term. Mrs. Cleveland looks out into the crowd of
well-wishers and supporters.
Design three is based on narrative number two,
popularity with the public, second term. This design
is a stylized rendering of Frances Cleveland's
meeting with admirers at a public event.
Design four, based on narrative number three,
educating women, second term. This design was
inspired by Frances Cleveland's creation of a
kindergarten program in the White House.
This is design five, based on narrative number
three, educating women, second term. In this
design, Frances Cleveland's passion for women's
education is alluded to by depicting her in a
conversation with two female students on the day of
their graduation. The location is not meant to be a
specific university campus.
Chair Marks: Okay. But we should understand that
this sort of scene actually happened?
Mr. Harrigal: This is representative of education.
Chair Marks: Okay.

141
Mr. Harrigal: Design number six is based on
narrative number three, educating women, second
term. This design depicts Mrs. Cleveland visiting a
classroom of children.
And design seven, this design depicts Frances
Cleveland's returning to Wells College to support
and congratulate graduates between 1897 and
1899.
Chair Marks: Okay, thank you. Any questions before
we go forward? Okay, we're not all jumping.
Okay, let's go to the obverses, and let's determine
what we want to continue to look at. Number one, is
there interest in number one?
(Chorus of yeses.)
Chair Marks: Number two? No on two. Number
three?
Number four? No on four. Number five? Okay.
We've got two images to look at, one and three.
Mr. Harrigal: Gary, I'd like to submit that the CFA
did not choose either obverse or reverse on this
design.
Chair Marks: Okay, thank you. All right.
So, let's move now to the reverse. Starting with
number one? Not hearing anything for one. Number
two?
Number three? Nothing for number three? Number
four? No on four. Number five?
Number six? Pass number six up. And number
seven?
Okay. We are left with consideration of two, five,
and seven. The others set aside.
So, this should be pretty simple. We've got two
images for the obverse, and three for the reverse.

142
Is there someone who would like to start this
discussion? Heidi, do you have any surprises for us?
Member Wastweet: No surprises.
Chair Marks: Because if you do, I'm going to start
with you. Go ahead, anyway.
Member Wastweet: All right, I'll go ahead. I think
obverse one and three are both quite nice. I have
no preference between the two. Either one I think
would be lovely.
On the reverses, I like the concept of number two.
Again, it's so story board like we've been asking not
to see, or not -- we haven't been fans of this style.
We've got a lot of little people there, so I like the
idea of it, but I can't fully support it for that reason.
Number five, we don't really need her to tell the
story of women graduating. We have her portrait on
the other side. It's a little repetitive. Number seven,
we've got a schoolhouse in the background with a
tree in front of it. The tree, especially, is not
necessary. It obscures the building and serves no
purpose.
I don't see any particular coining problems. I'm not
real excited about this design. Nothing more to say.
Chair Marks: Okay. Michael?
Member Moran: I kind of feel like Heidi, I've got no
choice. If I have to choose one on the obverse, it
would be number one over number three, just
personal preference.
The reverse I'm cold on all of them. I guess I don't
like number seven because of the background
clutter. I don't think number two would coin
particularly well, which leaves number five on
process of elimination. It's hardly a ringing
endorsement.
Chair Marks: Donald?

143
Member Scarinci: One and two.
Chair Marks: That's it?
Member Scarinci: That's it.
Chair Marks: Okay. On the obverse, I'll go with
number one. Does anyone know how old she would
have been at this time period?
Member Moran: Twenty-one plus eight, 29.
Chair Marks: Twenty-nine?
Member Moran: She was 21 in 1886, so do my
math, '93.
Chair Marks: Late 20s.
Member Moran: Late 20s.
Mr. Harrigal: Twenty-nine, 30 time frame, age.
Chair Marks: Okay. I guess number three looks a
little old to me, but I like number one as far as the
obverse goes. Number two, I'll preface this by
saying all we have are story boards here, so I'm
going to pick a story board. And I'll go with number
two, however, with the reservation that maybe this
is just me, but her face looks a little too old. I don't
know if I'm looking at that right, but she looks a
little -Member Wastweet: It probably doesn't matter at
that -Chair Marks: Okay.
Member Wastweet: It probably doesn't matter at
that scale.
Chair Marks: Well, that's probably a good point.
But, anyway -- so, I'll support number two. Donald,
or Michael?
Member Olson: I can't believe you got the two of us
mixed up.

144
(Laughter.)
Chair Marks: Yes, I can't either. It's been a long
day. I'm not going to live that one down.
(Laughter.)
Member Olson: All right. Number one and number
three, either one I could support for the obverse,
leaning more towards number one.
On the reverses, they're all very cluttered, and
nothing there really jumps out. I'm going to throw
some points toward one of these designs and most
likely it's going to be design number two, not
because I particularly care for it, but I think out of
what's offered it's probably the best of what's
offered. That's it.
Chair Marks: Michael?
Member Bugeja: I can go with one or three on the
obverse. I thought three had a little bit more
character, but you're right, it's a little older. I like
two because on those hats there should be a little
press card. It's the popularity that outshone the
President. I kind of like that motif. And the
education ones I'm all for. Number seven has a
building that could be any campus. I'm sure this is
Iowa State College, but I won't -The University of Northern Iowa, it's Iowa State
College, or is my alma mater, Oklahoma State. But
no, I actually do like the train image because it
shows a little bit of her popularity, and that's what I
really wanted to get.
Chair Marks: Erik?
Member Jansen: I'm going to favor on the obverse
number one. Three was actually I think a more
provocative picture, but I'm not sure it's
appropriate.
On the reverse, I'm going to go with number two,
and also going to cast a vote for number five, and

145
number seven. I think the narrative of popularity on
a trip with the President is a much easier narrative
to do a graphic on. At the same time, the education
element is important, so I don't want two to win it
by default. I'd encourage everyone to think about
five or seven. Pick one.
Chair Marks: Okay. All right. At this point, I think
we're finished with our First Spouses. I'll ask you to
complete your tally sheets and get those in to Erik.
The next thing that we need to do is to talk about
our annual report, but before we do that, I want to
give Erik a chance to tally. I think I'm going to give
us a break here, maybe a 10-minute break. I think
we're doing well on the time right now, only
because we don't have the 4:00 item that was
previously scheduled. So, if we could please be back
at 3:20, we'll get going with our discussion on the
annual report. I want us to get a little bit of a break
so we can clear our minds, and come back and
focus on the annual report. And by then, maybe
we'll have a tally to share, and we can make any
final motions that might be needed on First
Spouses. So, we're in recess.
(Whereupon, at 3:09 p.m., the above-entitled
matter went off the record and resumed at 3:20
p.m.)
Chair Marks: Okay, we're back on the record, and
we have some results for -- which ones do we have
here? The first two -- oh, Erik, I'm sorry. Are we still
working on the -Member Jansen: Yes, give me a couple of minutes,
and I'll give you the rest -- the last four.
Annual Report Discussion
Chair Marks: Okay. You know what, let's set the
First Spouse aside for now and let's start our
discussion on the annual report.
By way of reminder, our last meeting which was

146
back in September, we identified some potential
recommendations for our FY '11 annual report. We
had two years to make recommendations for, and
for one of those was 2015. And for 2015, we
discussed a recommendation for the 150th
anniversary of the Thirteenth Amendment to the
Constitution. That was the only recommendation for
that year we had on the table.
We already have another recommendation, either
that or it's an active program. But suffice it to say
that the two commemoratives for that year we
needed to fill one slot. And then for 2016 we had a
short list of some potential recommendations on
which we needed to find two. And those
recommendations that we had on the table in
September were the 100th anniversary of the
National Park Service, the 150th anniversary of the
ASPCA, which is the American Society for the
Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, and we also had
the 150th anniversary of the Transatlantic Cable.
Then we had a none date-specific recommendation
to honor Highway Route 66. As I recall there wasn't
any hook there for any round number as far as the
commemoration in years, but there was the
discussion that I Mike kind of led on Route 66.
So, at this point, what I'd like to take out of this
meeting are some concrete recommendations that
could be dropped into our report. Based on our
earlier discussions, these are the last three items
that we need to identify, and we can get a draft of
that report completed and to the staff for legal
review, and whatever approvals they need to get.
So, I'll open up the floor now. And why don't we, so
we can do this is an orderly fashion, are we all good
with the Thirteenth Amendment for 2015, or do we
want to talk about anything else? Are we good for
that? Could I have a motion?
Member
Jansen:
What
is
the
Amendment? Sorry to be ignorant.

Thirteenth

Chair Marks: That's the one right after the Civil War

147
that deals with the whole slavery issue.
Member Jansen: The whole?
Chair Marks: Slavery.
Member Jansen: Oh, slavery. I'm sorry. Yes, I'll
make the motion.
Chair Marks: Okay, go ahead.
Member Jansen: I move that we advance the idea of
a commemorative to mark the anniversary of the
Thirteenth Amendment.
Chair Marks:
anniversary.

Okay,

that

would

be

the

150th

Member Jansen: It would be.
Chair Marks: Yes. Okay. Is there any discussion?
(No response.)
Chair Marks: Okay. All those in favor say aye.
(Chorus of ayes.)
Chair Marks: Opposed? Motion carried unanimously.
Okay, that narrows it down to 2016. I'll just open
the floor up. Jump in there guys. What do you want
to do?
Two slots, and we have one, two, three, I think
we've got four. That doesn't preclude some other
idea coming up, but those are the four we've got on
the table right now.
Member Olson: I'll just make a pitch again for the
Route 66 commemoration. It would be the 90th
anniversary of the origination of that highway,
which is very important to the country for the past
90 years. It served as a migration route for those
fleeing the Depression and the Dust Bowl in the
Midwest to get them to the land of promise in
California. It served our country well during World

148
War II as a major supply route, a lot of military
bases and a lot of factories along that route right
through the heart of the country.
It spans approximately, I believe it's 2,500 miles
from Chicago to Los Angeles. Upon the cessation of
World War II, many returning veterans and other
folks that now had some freedom and time to roam
the country took that route on vacation. It goes
through eight different states. And many iconic
images are associated with Route 66.
We've got all kinds of interesting architecture that
could be depicted on a series of coins. The drive-in
movie theater, the drive-in restaurant, several
different classic cars, Thunderbirds, Corvettes. It's
really America.
Route 66 is very important not only to people here
in the U.S., but it's also very important to folks that
live outside of the U.S. They come here, and this is
-- this may be hard for some people to believe, but
that road is, for the most part, still there and
marked. It's not an official highway any more, but
it's a collection of state highways and county
highways that are connected with signs that depict
the route. And many people, not only our U.S.
citizens, but folks from other countries come here
specifically to drive that route or a portion of it to
get to the heart of America. They don't want to take
a look -- they want to see more than what's on the
coasts. And that road runs Illinois, Missouri, Kansas,
Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and
California. And it truly is a cross section of the
country.
I think a program based on that, a three-coin
program, however many coins you could get out of
it would provide us with a lot of good designs to
take a look at, that I believe would be a
commercially viable option for the Mint. I believe
something along those lines with the architecture
and the iconic images that I described would be
popular not only with coin collectors, but also a

149
broad section of the public.
Chair Marks: Thank you. Very well stated as far as
the pitch goes.
Member Jansen: Don't forget Winona.
Member Olson: And the song, yes.
Chair Marks: Okay. We've got one pitch in there.
Someone else, please, what are your preferences?
Member Bugeja: I think Michael Ross' ASPCA is a
good choice. I think it is an organization worthy of
commemorative coins. In many ways that's what we
try to do, is commemorate societies. And he's not
here today, and I'd like to maybe endorse his idea
in his absence.
Mr. Weinman: What is the event?
Chair Marks: The 150th anniversary of the formation
of the ASPCA.
Member Bugeja: Of the ASPCA.
Member Jansen: I'd like to kind of have his idea
remembered, as well. It's been a while since I've
seen
kind
of
some
consumer
centric
commemoratives come out. It seems to be we do a
lot of military work, we do a lot of other kind of
government-related stuff. You do a Route 66, and
that may bring out some really nice fanaticism. And
the ASP -- the Society for Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals brings out a different set. I mean, let's call
it the road killers and the anti-road killers.
(Laughter.)
Member Jansen: Well, they could be marketed
together that way. Of course, I'm kidding. But I do
think it actually would be refreshing. We've got
baseball coming up here. Right? We've got a
baseball commemorative -Mr. Fishburn: It has not passed yet.

150
Member Jansen: Okay, so it's out there being put
into the loop. So, nonetheless, I would support the
Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. I think
it's a social issue that will get some more traction.
Chair Marks: Okay. You know, on that one, is there
any contrary idea about ASPCA? Any reason we
don't want to do it? Is that one we're comfortable
moving on?
Member Wastweet: From an artistic standpoint, I
think it has wide open possibilities of imagery. It's
not as difficult to depict as some other topics.
Member Scarinci: And it'll sell. People love animals.
Member Wastweet: Yes.
Member Jansen: Has anyone approached that
organization to see if they want to sponsor this, i.e.,
would they accept the funds from it?
Chair Marks: Generally, we've not approached
organizations. We have a recommendation right
now that used to be associated with a group, and
that's the National Fallen Firefighters. We kind of
detached it from their organization this last time, so
I think that's -- that's up to anybody. It's up to the
folks here at the Mint to make contact if it's going to
be made. I don't think that's our proper role to be
contacting organizations.
Member Jansen: Well, we know that they exist, at
least, so there's -Chair Marks: Oh, yes.
Member Jansen: -- potential for friction or
opportunity depending on how it's looked at. Is
there a similar organization, the Society for
Prevention of Abuse to Route 66?
Member Olson: There is a -- the National Park
Service actually does have a -Member Jansen: The National Park Service.

151
Member Olson: I believe. There's a historic
preservation group. I can't give you the specifics on
it, but there is a group that promotes and preserves
the remaining landmarks along Route 66.
Chair Marks: Okay. I'm going to just -- my sense of
what I'm hearing, it sounds like we have support to
move on the ASPCA theme. And if that's so, I would
like to accept a motion.
Member Bugeja: I move that we accept the ASPCA
as one of our commemorative issues.
Member Jansen: Second.
Chair Marks: Okay, it's been moved and seconded
for the ASPCA commemoration. Is there any further
discussion before we vote?
(No response.)
Chair Marks: Okay. All those in favor please say
aye.
(Chorus of ayes.)
Chair Marks: Opposed? Motion carries unanimously.
That narrows it down for us to one. Mike has made
a impassioned plea for - I hope that's accurate - for
Route 66. Did I understand you to say that we
attach it to a 90th anniversary?
Member Olson: I don't really think -- everybody is
really focused on anniversaries and hard dates.
There's really nothing that says that a coin has to
be -Chair Marks: We don't need to.
Member Olson: But I really think a coin like that
would be a winner for the Mint. I think there's a
broad cross section of not only our citizens, but
people around the world that would look at those
coins.
And the other thing, too, is you've got eight states.

152
I don't think you'd probably have a whole lot of
problem getting Senators and Representatives to
back something like that. It's a big tourism boom,
and I was going to bring some books, but my
luggage was full. There's all kinds of books that
show what's out there. And it's a resurgent
movement. The last part of Route 66 as an official
U.S. highway, was bypassed in 1984. But since
then, as I stated before, the patchwork of the road
is still there, 90 percent of it's still there. It's being
marked, and it's being promoted as a tourist
destination.
Chair Marks: Okay.
Member Olson: I make a motion that we
recommend a coin series depicting the art and
images that could be found along Route 66.
Chair Marks: Okay. When you say a series, are you
speaking of a half dollar, silver dollar, and a fivedollar gold, which would be the traditional
assemblage?
Member Olson: Yes.
Chair Marks: Okay.
Member Moran: You might want to consider that
we've got eight states, you do eight different
reverse designs or something on a half dollar,
because you'll get better Congressional support -Member Olson: That would be -Member Moran: Heidi is over
repeating what she told me.

here.

I'm

just

Member Olson: And give each state a shot at -Chair Marks: Common obverse?
Member Olson: It wouldn't necessarily need to be.
Chair Marks: Well, what I'm saying is it simplifies
the program if we have a common obverse. And it

153
also lends to collector mentality that they all belong
to each other.
Member Olson: People are going to want -everyone -- so, yes, I think that's a great idea. If
you buy one, you're going to want them all. And I
think that would be an awesome idea.
Chair Marks: So, we're talking about a series of
eight half dollars?
Member Moran: You could do the dollar and you -Chair Marks: What's that?
Member Moran: If do you a dollar, the dollar size,
you've got a bigger -Member Olson: Yes, that would be a great idea. So,
we want to make it specific?
Chair Marks: Your motion for Route 66 is an eight
silver dollar series, common obverse, and one
reverse for each state.
Member Olson: Yes, that would be awesome.
Member Bugeja: Just as a point of order, Gary.
Should we not discuss Michael Ross' Transatlantic
Cable, as well, before we vote on it, because you're
looking for two programs. Is that right?
Chair Marks: Yes.
Member Bugeja: He's not here, so I am going to
voice -- I know he did some preliminary work for
you, and I added to that. And I wondered whether
you wanted to go directly to a vote, or did you want
to out of deference to him consider that, as well?
Chair Marks: We've got a motion on the table here.
I hear what you're saying. I think our vote is going
to reveal what we want to do. Correct?
Mr. Fishburn: I ask for clarification of the -Chair Marks: Could we --

154
Mr. Fishburn: Is your motion to do a circulating
commemorative, or a commemorative of half
dollars?
Chair Marks: I think we have switched to silver
dollars, but I think it's just a commemorative.
Member Olson: The Congressional —-- we're looking
for recommendations for the two slots for the
Congressional -Chair Marks: Yes. So, we're not talking about half
dollars circulate anyway, but -Mr. Fishburn: You may want to be cognizant of the
Committee's predecessor's recommendations on
mintage levels and number of coins.
Chair Marks: Translate.
Mr. Fishburn: The 500,000 silver limitation that's in
law, and came out of this Committee's predecessor,
the CCCAC.
Member Olson: How does that impact what we're
talking about here?
Mr. Fishburn: Well, if you get eight silver dollars, if
you -- you would severely be limiting the issue, the
mintages, or you would be breaking the mintage
limits.
Member Olson: Right, because that 750 is it, or is it
500?
Mr. Fishburn: It's 750 for the clad, 500 for the
silver, and 100,000 for the gold.
Chair Marks: Yes, you would be limiting yourself to
about 62,000.
Member Olson: Well, I'll tell you what, what did we
sell of the Army and -- about 100 of each this year?
Is that right?
Mr. Fishburn: I'm not sure, but I think it's a little

155
higher than that, though.
Member Olson: Okay. But it would certainly be a
highly desirable set if that's -- if 60,000 of each
were made. Is it within our purview to recommend
something other than a precious metal issuance?
Because I think there could be some good support
for this, if we included one for each state.
Mr. Fishburn: You could recommend it.
Member Jansen: What if you did half dollars for the
-- per state, because here's where my head is going
on this. It would also be an interesting breath of
fresh air to put these out at a lower price than
normal. So, in order to make that happen use a
base metal product, and half dollars is what comes
to my mind, larger coin and have more fun with it.
Mr. Harrigal: Yes. Typically, the commemorative
coin program would be the one dollar silver coin
90/10 composition. It could be a five or ten dollar
gold coin depending on -- they go back and forth on
the gold coin. And then it may or may not have the
half dollar. Those are generally the three
denominations that are used within the programs.
Member Bugeja: I have a question for Michael.
Michael, do they have a Route 66 Historical Society?
Is there anything with Route 66 that the
commemorative actually would generate funds for?
Because as I understand it, it doesn't exist.
Member Olson: No, it does. There is. And I -- if
somebody could do a little searching on the internet
here, there is -- I believe they're affiliated with the
National Park Service. There is an organization that
is doing something to preserve and promote Route
66. But I can't tell you what that is.
Member Bugeja: That would be key.
Chair Marks: So, we're talking about half dollars?
Does the half dollars really limit us to 500,000 on it?

156
Mr. Fishburn: The issue is 750.
Chair Marks: 750.
Mr. Fishburn: But the surcharge would be less. I
don't recall exactly what it is, but there's a different
surcharge for each level of coin.
(Simultaneous speaking.)
Member Olson: Can you imagine what the
packaging would be if you had all eight of those in
some kind of map, or something to depict the
Route.
Member Jansen: You could hit the web, again. Yes,
that would work.
Chair Marks: Okay.
Member Wastweet: Mike, there's a Route
Preservation
Foundation
and
a
Route
Association.

66
66

Chair Marks: Okay. So, at least a couple of -- okay.
So, we have a motion on the table. I'm feeling a
little bit funny about Transatlantic Cable. But I have
no idea where the Committee is on supporting the
Route 66 idea, so parliamentary process would
require me to go ahead and let's have the question
on Route 66. Depending on the outcome of that,
then we would consider other options.
Member Moran: Have we decided on whether we're
going to move for a dollar or a half?
Chair Marks: I'm understanding it's a half dollar.
The motion maker?
Member Olson: Andy, how hard would that be to get
it switched if we were going to do something like
that, the mintage levels?
Mr. Fishburn: No Congress can restrict a future
Congress' actions, so you could theoretically
override the law.

157
Member Olson: We'd be close to 100,000.
Mr. Fishburn: We'd be going with the Committee's
previous recommendations. That would be the
larger precedent.
Member Olson: If we made a recommendation and
it did catch fire with several of the states'
delegations, I think they would probably be
amenable to change that, or not? And if not, then I
would recommend we go with 750 on the half
dollar, and see where that -Chair Marks: That's my suggestion. Let's work
within the confines that we know work, and then if
Congress wants to do what Congress wants to do
different, but we've got to work within the
framework that we've got.
Mr. Fishburn: You could theoretically recommend a
program and discuss the concept in the
recommendation, and then leave it to the Congress
to decide how they wanted to deal with the mintage
level issue.
Member Olson: Yes, if we did make such a
recommendation then would that be within your
area to work with Congress to explain what our
proposal is, and try to gain support?
Mr. Fishburn: The annual report should stand on its
own.
Member Olson: Okay.
Mr. Fishburn: And it is up to Congress to work
Congress' will.
Member Olson: Yes.
Chair Marks: That would give us just over 94,000
each. We could make that recommendation, 94,000
each of these eight.
Member Olson: I think they'd sell every one of
them. I really do.

158
Chair Marks: Okay. All right. So, we're all clear on
the motion I hope. Are we?
Member Jansen: Restate it if you would, please.
Member Olson: I make a motion that 2016 we
recommend a half dollar themed commemorative
program that will allow each state to have one half
dollar with a common obverse and a state-specific
reverse that commemorates the history and
importance of Route 66 to the development of the
country, and its contributions to our culture.
Chair Marks: Okay, that's the motion. Who is the
second on it? Do we have a second?
Member Jansen: I'll second it.
Chair Marks: Okay, Erik is the second. Okay. So,
we're -- everyone is clear on the motion. Is there
any further discussion?
(No response.)
Chair Marks: Okay. All those in favor say aye.
(Chorus of ayes.)
Chair Marks: Raise hands. One, two, three, four,
five. Opposed? Did you vote?
Member Bugeja: I'm going to abstain.
Chair Marks: You were six. Okay. Six with one
abstention. Okay, six. Motion carries. Okay, so our - we're good with what we've got. Right? Okay.
One thing I want to circle back on that came out of
this last discussion, and that is when we talk about
ASPCA, are we talking about just a standalone silver
dollar? And I'll just say, I would suggest if we're
looking at an ambitious eight-coin -- pairing this
with an eight-coin program in the same year, that
maybe -- I don't know, ASPCA could either be just a
silver dollar or maybe a silver dollar and a half
dollar. I wouldn't go more than --

159
Member Bugeja: I'd like to see the ASPCA put forth
as a program, as well. But the chips fall where they
may. I think that's a much more viable series than
Route 66.
Chair Marks: Okay. So, define that as far as a
series. What denominations are you thinking?
Member Bugeja: I was thinking basically of half
dollars. I think that's appropriate. It's a big enough
canvas for the different animals that we could have
on there. And it's really going to help the cause. I
mean, there are -- the abandoned -- I can only
speak at university towns alone, but the number of
abandoned animals has risen tremendously with the
economic downturn. And I just think that this is a
program that could actually do some humanitarian
good.
Chair Marks: Others? I need to know what to write
in the report about the program itself, what are we
talking about?
Member Bugeja: I'd like to have half dollars, a
series of half dollars.
Chair Marks: How many?
Member Bugeja: Eight. I mean, four.
Member Jansen: How about one for each leg,
they're four-legged animals.
Member Bugeja: Four-legged animals. We'll take
Erik's advice.
Member Olson: One for each breed of dog, and -Chair Marks: Guys, you know what, I'll just put this
on the record. I think we're overreaching in the one
year.
Mr. Fishburn: The standard -Chair Marks: I'm not sure what to do with it, but I
kind of feel like if we go more than two, we're just -

160
- we're out there.
Mr. Fishburn: The standard commemorative profile
is a clad silver gold providing options -(Simultaneous speaking.)
Mr. Fishburn: So, you've got an obverse and
reverse for each coin.
Member Bugeja: You know, I'm only interested in
how much -- the funding that it could generate for a
needy cause. So, whatever the -- I'm less interested
in how to achieve that than to defer to the Mint on
what would be the best combination. It could be the
90 percent silver dollar.
Chair Marks: Precious metal is going to give you -Member Bugeja: If that's going to give more funds
to the ASPCA, then that's what I want to do.
Chair Marks: Okay, so we're talking silver dollar.
Member Bugeja: Yes, and I think it would make it
more viable, so I'm going to go backtrack on my
recommendation and take yours.
Chair Marks: The three?
Member Bugeja: Standard commemorative of silver
dollar, half dollar.
Member Jansen: With the gold on the top or not?
Member Bugeja: No.
Member Jansen: Okay.
Member Bugeja: No, because I want it to be
affordable.
Member Jansen: Yes.
Chair Marks: Okay, so half dollar, one dollar.
Member Bugeja: Yes.

161
Chair Marks: Do we need a motion on that, or do we
consider that part of what we already did? I think
that's what we already did. I'm not hearing
objections. Okay.
And then back to the Thirteenth Amendment. We're
just talking about silver dollars.
Member Jansen: Well, there's two ways to go in my
view, either a silver dollar or the standard kind of
compliant gold-silver clad layer.
Chair Marks: I don't know, for some reason it's just
hitting me just a silver dollar. I don't know. Anyone
else? How much can you do with the Thirteenth
Amendment? Maybe a lot, maybe that was an
ignorant comment, but -Member Jansen: I'm fine with it. I'm fine with it. I
think as Michael just said, the bulk of the work is
done by the silver dollar.
For your information, Gary, the Transatlantic Cable,
1858. It was laid in 1858.
Chair Marks: So, are we in the wrong year?
Member Jansen: 1858, do the math.
Chair Marks: Okay, we're in the wrong year.
Member Jansen: We're in the wrong year.
Chair Marks: Okay. You know what, I'm going to
move us forward. Let's talk about the outcome of
our First Spouses.
We can -- well, you're right on top of it. Can
someone bring up the images as we talk about
them here, please.
Okay. For Alice Paul on the obverse, we're clearly
coming -- we clearly support five. Five had 16 of the
21 possible, the other scores were number one had
four votes, two and three were zero, four had two,
six
had
one,
seven
had
ten.
So,
our

162
recommendation would go to number five.
For the reverse, nearly a perfect score for number
four, 20 out of 21, with design number two picking
up three votes, all others zero. So, number four
would be our clear recommendation for Alice Paul
on the reverse.
Moving on Cleveland first term, design number
seven received 16, and we therefore get our
recommendation. Other designs receiving votes
were number one at four votes, number two at five,
design number three at five, four received zero, five
two, and design number six zero.
Cleveland reverse term number one, 13 of the 21
possible number five. So, that would be our choice.
The only other two designs that received any
support were number three received two points, and
number eight received three. All the others were
zero, so pretty -- although, it's a low -- the 13 that's
low, but it's clear and away the choice.
Okay. Moving on the Harrison obverse, design
number one received 15, so that would be our
recommendation. Designs two and five received
seven each, the others zero. Harrison reverse,
another far and away 18 of 21 to design five on the
reverse. And others receiving support were number
one received three, number four received two,
number eight received five, all others zero. And I'll
remind us all, we probably want to revisit number
five because I know that was heavily -- that point
score was heavily influenced by Heidi's introduction
of the china issue.
Let's move on to Cleveland term two. Design
number one received 19. Design number three
received 12, and the other three zero. So, one
would be our recommendation.
On the reverse our recommendation goes to two,
design two with 14. Designs five and seven each
received five, all others zero. So, at this point I
would entertain any motions that need to be

163
considered to round out our business on the First
Spouses.
Member Olson: I make a motion on Harrison
number five reverse that we encourage the use of
the design that Heidi showed us, but barring that, if
we do either that or the one that's been selected, I
also further make a motion that we add her
personal mark onto the coin.
Chair Marks: Can we take those one at a time?
Member Olson: Okay.
Chair Marks: Okay. So, we've got the first motion to
recommend substituting the china image provided
or introduced to us through Heidi in place of the
orchid that currently exists on the design. Do I have
a second?
Member Wastweet: I should second that.
Chair Marks: You should second it. Okay. So, it's
been moved and seconded. What discussion, if any,
do we have?
(No response.)
Chair Marks: I don't hear any, so those in favor say
aye.
(Chorus of ayes.)
Chair Marks: Opposed? That sounds unanimous to
me. So, that will be our recommendation on reverse
number five for Harrison. Did you want to follow
through, Mike?
Member Olson: Second motion, that her mark, the
four-leaf clover, be added in a small way to
whichever design is selected.
Member Bugeja: I second that.
Chair Marks: Okay, it's been moved and seconded.
Is there any discussion?

164
(No response.)
Chair Marks: All those in favor say aye.
(Chorus of ayes.)
Chair Marks: Opposed? That sounds unanimous,
too.
Member Moran: I'm going to stick one more motion
in there, Gary.
Chair Marks: Go for it.
Member Moran: I move that if we accept or end up
with number five as depicted, that we move the
paintbrush to be over the lily petal, not under.
Chair Marks: Okay. So, if five remains as five is,
then what do we want to do with the paintbrush?
I'm sorry.
Member Moran: Place it over the lily petal, not
under.
Chair Marks: Say again.
Member Moran: Place it over the lily petal, not
under.
Chair Marks: Paintbrush over the lily petal. Okay.
Member Bugeja: Otherwise it's not a design, it's just
a flower with some brushes.
Chair Marks: Okay. Can I have a second on that.
Member Olson: Second.
Chair Marks: Okay. Some discussion? All those in
favor?
(Chorus of ayes.)
Chair Marks: Opposed? That also sounds unanimous
to me. Is there anything else we need to consider,
Committee?

165
Member Wastweet: I have a motion on the Frances
Cleveland reverse five first term. I motion that the
hairstyle be corrected to reflect her iconic style.
Member Jansen: Do we have a template of what
that should look like?
Member Wastweet: It's on the obverse, all of the
obverses.
Member Jansen: So, which of the obverses would be
the quintessential coif?
Member Wastweet: All of the obverses reflect the
fringe hair at the nape of the neck.
Chair Marks: Okay. So, we want to alter the
hairstyle to reflect?
Member Wastweet: Fringe hair at the nape of the
neck.
Chair Marks: What is it?
Member Wastweet: The fringe hair at the nape of
the neck.
Chair Marks: Fringe?
Member Wastweet: Fringed.
Member Jansen: It's kind of blocked hair, Gary.
That's what they call it in Montana.
Chair Marks: Blocked hair?
Member Jansen: Blocked hair, yes.
Chair Marks: Fringed hairstyle. Okay. Is there a
discussion on that?
(No response.)
Chair Marks: All those in favor?
Member Wastweet: Do we have a second?
Chair Marks: Oh, I'm sorry. Second?

166
Member Moran: Second.
Chair Marks: Okay, Michael Moran seconds. All
those in favor?
(Chorus of ayes.)
Chair Marks: Opposed? Unanimous. Anything else,
Committee?
Okay. Now I'll look to staff, is there anything else
we need to cover before we adjourn?
(No response.)
Conclude Meeting
Chair Marks: Okay. You know what, I want to thank
everyone who took part in all this today, staff,
Committees, and thank you for your total attention
and dedication to the process today.
I think it was a good process. We made a lot of
progress in a lot of areas. We got the work done,
and I appreciate all of you, and all of you
contributed today.
We'll be in touch. I guess at this point our next
meeting is a little uncertain, but we're probably
looking at February.
Mr. Fishburn: Next in-person meeting is likely to be
February.
Chair Marks: Is what?
Mr. Fishburn: Next in-person meeting is likely to be
February.
Chair Marks: Likely to be February.
Member Jansen: Can we shoot for the fourth
Thursday just nominally?
Mr. Fishburn: If there is a fourth Thursday. I think
there has to be -- always at the end of February.

167
Chair Marks: The Mint will be in touch with all of us
concerning that matter. And is there anything else
before we adjourn?
(No response.)
Chair Marks: Okay, we are adjourned.
(Whereupon, the proceedings went off the record at
3:56 p.m.)