{"product_id":"1930-united-states-wheat-penny-interwar-era-lincoln-first-full-year-of-the-depression-very-good-to-very-fine","title":"1930 United States Wheat Penny (P) — Great Depression \/ Lincoln — Wheat Reverse — Very Good+ to Very Fine","description":"\u003cdiv class=\"group flex border-l-[3px] border-l-transparent transition-colors duration-75\" data-diff-type=\"normal\"\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"flex-1 flex items-center pl-0 pr-2 group-data-[scrollable]\/overlay:pr-6 min-w-0 font-mono\"\u003e\n\u003cp\u003e🕊️ Dropped into grocery tills and counted out carefully at corner stores in a country that was learning to spend less and count more, this penny circulated through the first full year of an economic collapse that had no name yet.\u003cbr\u003e \u003cbr\u003eThe Lincoln cent was twenty-one years old in 1930, and the world it served was contracting. Philadelphia struck over a hundred and fifty-seven million pennies that year — still a substantial number, but the downward trend was unmistakable. Combined production across all three mints fell by a fifth from the previous year, and by 1932 it would fall by ninety percent, bottoming out at levels not seen since the coin's first year of issue. But in 1930, nobody knew that yet. Hoover told the country the worst was over. Banks were still open. Factories were cutting hours but not yet closing. The Smoot-Hawley Tariff, signed in June, raised duties on over twenty thousand imported goods — intended to protect American industry, it triggered retaliatory tariffs from trading partners and made everything worse. Unemployment doubled from the previous year but was still below ten percent, a number that would seem miraculous by 1933. The penny that bought a stick of gum in September 1929 could buy two sticks by the end of 1930 — deflation meant that a coin worth less in confidence was worth more at the counter. What circulated as ordinary small change in the first year of a catastrophe is now an artifact of the moment the country realized the boom was not coming back.\u003cbr\u003e \u003cbr\u003e\u003cstrong\u003e💡 Everyday Life at the Time\u003c\/strong\u003e\u003cbr\u003eA penny in 1930 bought what it had always bought — a piece of candy, a penny postcard, a turn at a penny arcade machine — but the hands that held it were beginning to close a little tighter. Families who had bought on credit through the twenties were now paying down debts on shrinking wages, and every transaction was calculated with a precision that hadn't been necessary a year before. Grocery shopping shifted from department stores back to neighborhood markets where prices could be negotiated and credit extended on a handshake. Newspapers cost two cents, and people read them more carefully, scanning for signs of recovery that kept being promised and kept not arriving. The coins that moved through this early phase of contraction accumulated their wear in the same way they always had, but they moved more slowly — changing hands less often as spending contracted, sitting in jars and drawers longer as families stretched every dollar further.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cstrong\u003e \u003c\/strong\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\u003cstrong\u003e📜 Historical Context\u003c\/strong\u003e\u003cbr\u003eThe first year of the Great Depression was defined less by crisis than by confusion. The stock market crash of October 1929 had shaken confidence, but through much of 1930 the prevailing expectation was still recovery — a correction, a cycle, something that would reverse on its own. Hoover's administration resisted direct intervention, trusting that markets would self-correct and that voluntary cooperation between business and labor would hold wages steady. Neither assumption proved correct. By year's end, over a thousand banks had failed, industrial production had fallen by a third from its 1929 peak, and unemployment was climbing toward a figure that would reach twenty-five percent by 1933. The Smoot-Hawley Tariff, signed into law that June over the objections of more than a thousand economists, accelerated the contraction by strangling international trade. The penny struck that year carried no sign of any of this — the same bronze, the same weight, the same design. But the economy it moved through was already a different country from the one that had produced it.\u003cbr\u003e \u003cbr\u003e\u003cstrong\u003e🧾 Coin Details\u003c\/strong\u003e\u003cbr\u003eYear: 1930\u003cbr\u003eCountry: United States\u003cbr\u003eDenomination: 1 Cent (Wheat Penny)\u003cbr\u003eGovernment: United States Federal Government\u003cbr\u003eComposition: 95% Copper, 5% Tin and Zinc\u003cbr\u003eWeight: 3.11 g\u003cbr\u003eDiameter: 19.05 mm\u003cbr\u003eThickness: 1.55 mm\u003cbr\u003eMintage: 157,415,000\u003cbr\u003eCondition: Very Good+ to Very Fine (range across group)\u003cbr\u003e \u003cbr\u003eIn hand, a 1930 wheat penny carries the same dense bronze heft as its predecessors — the weight of nearly pure copper pressing into the palm with a solidity that feels almost defiant for a coin struck in a year when everything solid was proving otherwise. The surfaces have settled into a distinctive steel-gray patina, cooler and darker than the warm chocolate of earlier dates, with olive undertones that catch the light differently as the coin is turned. It fills the space between thumb and forefinger with the particular thickness of pre-war bronze, cool from rest and slow to warm, its edges still crisp enough to trace but rounded by the deliberate handling of a decade when people were paying closer attention to what they had.\u003cbr\u003e \u003cbr\u003e\u003cstrong\u003e⭐ Why This Coin Is a Great Collectible\u003c\/strong\u003e\u003cbr\u003eStruck in the first full calendar year of the Great Depression, when mintages began their steep decline\u003cbr\u003eShows the distinctive cool steel-gray patina that develops on bronze exposed to different handling and storage patterns\u003cbr\u003eCarries the same weight and composition as the boom-year pennies, unchanged while the economy around it transformed\u003cbr\u003eBelongs to the inflection point in the Lincoln cent series when production started its slide toward the Depression lows of 1931-1933\u003cbr\u003eThe kind of coin that looked exactly the same as the year before, in a country that did not\u003cbr\u003e \u003cbr\u003e\u003cstrong\u003e💡 Collector Tip\u003c\/strong\u003e\u003cbr\u003eThe 1930 wheat penny sits at the top of the cliff in the Lincoln cent mintage chart. Philadelphia's output of a hundred and fifty-seven million looks enormous until you track what happens next: 1931 drops to nineteen million, 1932 to nine million, and San Francisco stops striking cents entirely for two of those years. Once you see that trajectory, the 1930 penny stops looking like just another common date and starts looking like the last moment of normalcy before the series entered its most constrained period. The kind of collector who develops an eye for inflection points — the years where the numbers change direction — begins to see every series differently, reading the production data as a record of what was happening in the country, not just the mint.\u003cbr\u003e \u003cbr\u003eYou will receive one coin from the group shown, selected individually. All coins are authentic and unaltered — we don't enhance patina or touch up surfaces. Grades are conservative; circulated pieces show honest wear from actual use, not damage or mishandling. Carefully packaged and ships promptly with tracking.\u003cbr\u003e \u003cbr\u003eHoover said the worst was over. The mint kept striking pennies. The pennies were right about the economy and the president was not.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"WadesCoinShop","offers":[{"title":"Philadelphia ( )","offer_id":47970460074198,"sku":"USP1930","price":1.39,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0811\/4939\/5158\/files\/a38f84df-il_fullxfull.1925310446_fm9k.jpg?v=1774275058","url":"https:\/\/wadescoinshop.myshopify.com\/products\/1930-united-states-wheat-penny-interwar-era-lincoln-first-full-year-of-the-depression-very-good-to-very-fine","provider":"WadesCoinShop","version":"1.0","type":"link"}