The Mercury or Winged Liberty dime (1916-1945) has long stood as an iconic coin in the U.S. series. The coin’s elegant design draws heavily from the French Beaux Arts movement of the late 19th century. Its release immediately preceded the Roosevelt dime (1946-Present), and it is the last U.S. dime to be struck entirely in .900 silver.
In the year of the coin’s initial release, Americans were introduced to three iconic U.S. coin designs. The other two were the Walking Liberty half dollar (also designed by Adolph Weinman and the basis of the American Silver Eagle bullion coin’s obverse design) and the Standing Liberty quarter (designed by Massachusetts-based sculptor Hermon Atkins MacNeil). These coins joined the Indian Head (Buffalo) nickel, the Lincoln cent, the Indian quarter eagle and half eagle by Bela Lyon Pratt, and the Saint-Gaudens $10 and $20 gold coins.
It was truly a golden age of U.S. coin design.
A Brief History of the Mercury (Winged Liberty) Dime
The original Winged Liberty dime entered circulation at the end of October 1916 and remained in production for nearly 30 years.
Heralded for its beauty, the Winged Liberty dime, often called the Mercury dime due to its classically-inspired headgear, saw the country through World Wars and the Great Depression. Its unmistakable design was attached to the March of Dimes anti-polio campaign and countless Charles Atlas advertisements in the back of comic books and magazines. When “Yip” Harburg wrote the song “Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?”, it was the Mercury dime he was talking about.
The dime’s use in circulation carried on without incident. The design didn’t have the striking problems of the Buffalo nickel or the Walking Liberty half. Although specialists might seek out perfectly struck examples with Full Split Bands on the reverse (scarce for some issues), the Mercury dime is remembered as an elegant and practical coin; a successful coin that served its purpose and elevated the image of American money.
The Mercury dime’s term of service came to an unexpected end when President Franklin Delano Roosevelt died on April 12, 1945. Almost immediately, a movement began to honor Roosevelt on a circulating coin. The dime was the obvious choice as the denomination recalled Franklin’s battle with polio and his work with the March of Dimes.
So, the stellar 30-year run of the Winged Liberty dime came to an end. Over the next few decades, coins in circulation were worn down, Mint State examples were hoarded, rare dates and varieties were cherrypicked, and by the time silver coins exited the scene in the mid-to-late 1960s, only the most worn examples continued circulating.
Untold tens of thousands of original Mercury dimes—including some scarce dates—were melted in the silver run-up of the early 1980s. While a number of conditional rarities exist, the series is generally remembered for two key dates: the 1916-D and the scarce 1942/1941 overdate.
The 1916-D Is Scarce; What About the 1916-P?
1916 heralded the release of three new coin series. The Mercury dime was produced at three mints. At Philadelphia, 22,180,080 coins were struck. At San Francisco, the mintage was 10,450,000. The Denver Mint, however, produced only 264,000 pieces. Collecting coins by mint mark was relatively uncommon among collectors, so most of Denver’s paltry mintage found its way into circulation. Still, coins from all three mints were hoarded to some extent, with the Philadelphia Mint’s emission being the most widely encountered in quantity in Mint State.
Despite being first-year issues, the 1916-P and the 1916-S Mercury dime are common in all grades. The finest known examples of the issue have been graded MS68 Full Bands by PCGS and NGC.
Online auction records indicate that the record price paid for a 1916 Mercury dime in MS68 was $14,687.50 USD, which was realized at Legend Rare Coin Auctions Regency 28 Sale, held in September 2018. This particular example features beautiful rich rainbow toning on the obverse and reverse and was CAC-approved. A brilliant white example in an NGC holder brought $3,249.60 at a January 2024 Heritage auction. GreatCollections sold an attractive rainbow-toned coin that had crossed from NGC MS68FB CAC to CACG at the same grade for $9,001.12 in October 2023.
These prices only apply to coins graded amongst the finest known. The retail price of a certified example in grades MS63 to MS65 will typically fall within the $70 to $90 range, and circulated examples are worth a few dollars more than the coin’s intrinsic silver value.
We caution against buying raw uncirculated coins unless you can discern the difference between original surfaces and coins that have been dipped, harshly cleaned, or tooled to show Split Bands; buying an uncertified Mint State example of this issue for less than $50 is possible.
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Market Data and Noteworthy Specimens
Top Population: PCGS MS68+FB (1, 3/2024), NGC MS68+FB (1, 3/2024), and CAC MS68FB (8:1 stickered:graded, 3/2024).
The PCGS MS68FB population stood at three coins in June 2001, seven at MS68FB through January 2011, and 15 by the summer of 2015. As of March 2024, the population in that grade stands at 16. One coin made MS68+FB at some point before the summer of 2020. Several coins that have appeared at auction since 2003 have been reholdered or crossed over.
- PCGS MS68+FB CAC #39478604: Stack’s Bowers, August 2020, Lot 1180 – $20,400. Dusting of dark red and green toning on the obverse and reverse.
- NGC MS68FB #1600523-002: Heritage Auctions, February 2007, Lot 2973 – $2,990; Heritage Auctions, January 10, 2024, Lot 3329 – $3,249.60. Brilliant with tick behind mouth, small scratch on neck.
- PCGS MS68FB #22059122: “The Larry Shapiro #1 All-Time Finest Mercury Dimes Full bands Basic PCGS Registry Set,” Heritage Auctions, January 2006, Lot 1866 – $6,325. Larry Shapiro on insert; Heritage Auctions, February 7, 2013, Lot 3764 – $10,692.50. Reholdered; “The Samuel Zavellas Collection,” Heritage Auctions, November 16, 2023, Lot 3025 – $10,800. Brilliant. Die crack along bust truncation. Tiny tick on chin. Top of TES flatly struck.
- NGC MS68FB #147657-001: Heritage Auctions, February 12, 2002, Lot 13177 – $2,415; Heritage Auctions, November 22, 2002, Lot 6862 – $1,840; Heritage Auctions, February 3, 2011, Lot 3441 – $3,220; Stack’s Bowers, November 16, 2023, Lot 6091 – $3,120. Brilliant. Die crack at 6 o’clock through neck.
- CACG MS68FB #932304114: As NGC MS68FB CAC #5748804-004. Heritage Auctions, July 14