1912. Barber’s somewhat staid classicism would soon be wiped off American silver by the coming World War and replaced by a more natural (and urgent, perhaps) nationalism, but not just yet. Barber’s Lady Liberty was still holding on.
The dime itself was a very active and useful coin still, in 1912—not least because it was in the process of being discovered to be just the correct size for gapping the spark plugs of Model T Fords.
Barber dimes were mostly retired by the late 1940s, but beginning in 1997, they were given brief (but recurring) moments of cultural currency because of a connection of these coins to the tragic 1912 sinking of the ocean liner RMS Titanic.
According to the movie’s director, James Cameron, in Titanic it is a 1912 dime similar to this one that Rose offers to Jack as payment for his drawing her wearing her necklace—and nothing else.
