1 Cent "Lincoln - Wheat Ears Reverse" obverse1 Cent "Lincoln - Wheat Ears Reverse" reverse
United States

1 Cent "Lincoln - Wheat Ears Reverse" · “Lincoln - Wheat Ears Reverse

United States · 1909–1958 · Bronze

Every listing identified by its certification barcode — a verifiable fact, not a guess.

The coin

The story

The Lincoln Wheat Cent

For more than a century, American coins showed Liberty — never a real person. Putting a once-living face on the nation's money felt too close to a king's portrait. Then, in 1909, a Lithuanian immigrant sculptor put Abraham Lincoln on the penny, and the rule was broken forever.

Catalogue

Issuer
United States
Years
1909–1958
Metal
Bronze
All United States series
Full catalogue history on Numista

The story behind the coin

For its first 117 years, the United States kept a quiet rule about its money: no real faces. Coins showed Liberty, eagles, an idealized Native American — symbols, never people. Putting a once-living person on a coin smacked of monarchy, of the kings and emperors the young republic had defined itself against.

The hundredth anniversary of Abraham Lincoln's birth broke that rule. February 12, 1909 marked Lincoln's centennial, and the country wanted to honor the man who had held the Union together. President Theodore Roosevelt — already deep into a campaign to make American coins beautiful again — pushed for a Lincoln portrait on the most ordinary coin of all, the one-cent piece. Every American handled pennies. A Lincoln cent would put the savior of the Union into millions of pockets at once.

The result, released in August 1909, was the first regular U.S. circulating coin to carry the likeness of an actual historical person. It replaced the Indian Head cent and started a run that lasted half a century. The "wheat cent" nickname comes from its reverse — the reverse is the tails side — where two stalks of wheat frame the words ONE CENT. That design held until 1958.

The design and who made it

The man behind both sides was Victor David Brenner, a sculptor and medalist who had emigrated from Lithuania. Roosevelt had sat for a Brenner plaque of Lincoln and admired it; that portrait became the basis for the coin. Brenner designed the obverse — the heads side — with Lincoln in profile, and the reverse with its two simple wheat ears. He did both.

Then came the row that made the coin famous before anyone had a chance to admire it. Brenner placed his initials — V.D.B. — prominently at the bottom of the reverse, at the 6 o'clock position. To Brenner this was ordinary practice; sculptors sign their work. To critics it looked like a billboard. Newspapers complained that a designer was getting free advertising on the nation's coinage. The outcry was loud enough that the Mint pulled the design within days of its August 2, 1909 debut and ground the initials off the dies by August 6.

That tiny edit is the engine behind the whole series' romance. A handful of coins — struck in those first days, in both Philadelphia and San Francisco — carry the V.D.B. The rest don't. Brenner's credit didn't return until 1918, when his initials reappeared in miniature on the truncation of Lincoln's shoulder, where you'll still find them on the cent today. The lesson the Mint took from 1909: a designer can sign the work, just quietly.

Key facts

Collecting it: key dates and famous varieties

The wheat cent is the gateway series for American collectors — common enough that almost anyone can start a folder, deep enough that the best dates command real money. Three issues form the spine of any serious set.

The 1909-S VDB is the king. The San Francisco Mint got the dies late and struck only 484,000 before the initials were removed — the lowest mintage of any regular-issue Lincoln cent. First year, lowest mintage, and the V.D.B. backstory all at once: no wonder it's the coin every wheat-cent collector wants.

The 1914-D (Denver) is the quiet trap. Its mintage of 1,193,000 isn't tiny, but almost none were saved in fresh condition — they circulated until worn smooth. In high, unworn grades it is the rarest regular issue in the series, and it's the date most often counterfeited (often by altering a 1944-D). The 1931-S (San Francisco), at 866,000 struck during the Great Depression, is the second-lowest mintage — but collectors knew it was scarce at the time and hoarded it, so many survive in nice condition. Two low-mintage coins, two opposite survival stories.

Then there are the errors that became legends:

  • The 1922 "Plain" (No-D): in 1922, only Denver struck cents — so every 1922 cent should wear a D. On some, worn and grease-clogged dies left the mintmark missing entirely. The most prized variety comes from a single die pair (Die Pair 2) where the D was polished away during a die repair, producing a genuine "No-D" coin that looks like it was minted nowhere.
  • The 1943 steel cent: with copper needed for shell casings and wiring in World War II, the Mint struck 1943 cents in zinc-coated steel. They came out silvery and magnetic — the only regular U.S. cent you can pick up with a magnet. In 1944 the Mint went back to copper, reclaimed from spent military shell casings, the so-called "shell-case" cents.
  • The 1955 Doubled Die: a working die at the Philadelphia Mint took its second blow from the hub slightly out of register, doubling the date and lettering — LIBERTY and IN GOD WE TRUST appear visibly twice. Roughly 40,000 were struck on a single night shift, and an estimated 20,000–24,000 reached the public mixed in with normal cents. The Mint chose not to chase them down. It remains one of the most dramatic, naked-eye errors in U.S. coinage.

A word on why high grades are scarce. Cents were spending money — they were meant to be spent, not saved. Copper also tones and spots over time, so a wheat cent that kept its full original mint-red color across a hundred years is genuinely uncommon. That's why grade and color matter so much here: a worn 1909-S VDB is a treasure, but a blazing red one in top grade is a different animal entirely.

Questions collectors ask

Sources