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Stack's Bowers Rare Coin GalleriesIMAGE INFORMATION

A Silver Medal of Washington struck in Decr. 1805 on the reverse The Eagle with the olive Branch and Lightening hovering over the U.S. in 1783

Object Status:

Unlocated

Accession Date:

January 1, 1806

Primary Source Reference:

Peale Museum Accessions Book, Historical Society of Pennsylvania, p. 11

Additional Source Text:

"Presented by Joseph Sansom."

Notes:

In 1805 and 1806 Joseph Sansom issued a series of commemorative medals designed by him and engraved by John Matthias Reich (1768-1833) depicting American historical events. His medal of George Washington, available in gold at fifty dollars, or in silver at five dollars, was advertised for sale in the winter of 1805-1806. Madison Papers, Founders Online, National Archives / https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Madison/02-10-02-0413

Pennsylvania Quaker Joseph Sansom (1767-1826) was the brother and business partner of prosperous Philadelphia merchant and East India trader William Sansom. Self-described as a merchant, Joseph Sansom used his resources to further interests in literature, travel, and the arts. As an amateur artist, he mastered the silhouette profile, producing his “physiognomical sketches” of “remarkable persons” from 1790 to 1792. He recorded portions of his three-year tour abroad in Letters from Europe during a Tour Through Switzerland and Italy, in the Years 1801 and 1802 (Philadelphia, 1805). The following year, he was elected to the American Philosophical Society and, in 1808, contributed to it his mineral collections and Roman relics. Jefferson Papers, Founders Online, National Archives / https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Jefferson/01-40-02-0286 ; Charles Coleman Sellers, “Joseph Sansom, Philadelphia Silhouettist,” Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, 88 (1964): 395–401