Recently at the Philadelphia auditorium a group of invited guest were present for the unveiling of coins designed to celebrate the country’s 250th anniversary. They provided a traditional, even simple, take on the American journey, with Pilgrims and founding fathers and a stovepipe hat tip to the Gettysburg Address.
Left
unmentioned amid the event’s fife-and-drum pageantry was that these coins also
represented a rejection of a different set of designs — meant to commemorate
certain other inspiring chapters of the nation’s history, including abolition,
women’s suffrage and the civil rights movement, reported The New York Times.
An event
largely unnoticed by anyone other than coin enthusiasts, then, wound up
reflecting the national struggle over how the American story is told, as the
Trump administration seeks to frame any focus on the knottier moments in the
nation’s arc as “wokeness.”
The treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, is authorized by law to make final decisions about coin designs, including these 250th anniversary coins — a dime, a half-dollar and five quarters — which are both collectible and legal tender. But his choices ignored the more diverse recommendations for the quarters by the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee, a bipartisan group mandated by Congress to review the U.S. Mint’s proposed designs for American coins.
To
commemorate the abolition of slavery, the committee had recommended an image of
Frederick Douglass on the obverse and shackled and unshackled hands on the
reverse. To honor women’s suffrage, a World War I-era protester carrying a
“Votes for Women” flag. And to evoke the civil rights movement, a 6-year-old
Ruby Bridges, books in hand, helping to desegregate the New Orleans school
system in 1960.
Mr.
Bessent opted instead for the more general, and much whiter. For the Mayflower
Compact, a Pilgrim couple staring into the distance. For the Revolutionary War,
a profile of Washington. For the Declaration of Independence, a profile of
Thomas Jefferson. For the Constitution, a profile of James Madison. And for the
Gettysburg Address, a profile of Lincoln on the obverse, and on the reverse, a
pair of interlocking hands. No shackles.
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