US coin · series

The American Legion Centennial Silver Dollar

A French lily on an American coin — for a veterans' group born in a Paris caucus in 1919.

In March 1919, a few thousand restless American soldiers, still in France with the war over, met in Paris and founded the American Legion. A century later the U.S. Mint marked the moment with a silver dollar — and put a French fleur-de-lis right on the back of it.

The story behind the coin

The Great War was over, but the troops were still in France — millions of them, waiting for ships home, bored and uneasy about what they were going home to. In March 1919, in Paris, a group of officers and enlisted men called a caucus to organize the men of the American Expeditionary Forces into something lasting. That meeting became the American Legion, founded March 15, 1919.

It grew into one of the largest veterans' organizations in the world, and over the next hundred years it pushed for the things we now take for granted — most famously the G.I. Bill of 1944, which sent a generation of returning soldiers to college and into their own homes.

In 2019 that century came due. Congress had already passed the American Legion 100th Anniversary Commemorative Coin Act in 2017 (Public Law 115-65), authorizing a one-year run of commemorative coins for 2019 only. This silver dollar is the centerpiece of that program — a small, deliberate object meant to put a hundred years of an organization's work into a person's hand.

What the coin shows

The obverse — the heads side — carries the American Legion's own emblem: a star surrounded by rings, here framed with oak leaves and a lily. It was designed by Paul C. Balan and sculpted by Renata Gordon. The lily and the oak are not decoration for decoration's sake; they tie the modern emblem back to the founding in France.

Flip it over and the coin tells you where the Legion came from. The reverse, designed by Patricia Lucas-Morris and sculpted by Michael Gaudioso, shows the flags of the United States and the American Legion crossed, beneath a fleur-de-lis — the stylized lily that is the centuries-old symbol of France. Around it runs the inscription "100 YEARS OF SERVICE," with the dates 1919 and 2019. It is a quietly unusual thing: an American legal-tender coin that openly salutes the foreign city where the organization was born.

The dollar was struck only at the Philadelphia Mint, so every example carries a P mint mark — the small letter that tells you which Mint facility struck the coin. It came in two finishes: a proof (struck twice from polished dies for a mirror-like field and frosted devices) and an uncirculated version (a single sharp strike with a satin surface).

Key facts

Denomination
$1 (silver dollar)
Year struck
2019 only
Mint
Philadelphia (P mint mark)
Composition
.999 fine silver
Weight
26.73 g
Diameter
38.1 mm
Edge
Reeded
Obverse design
Paul C. Balan (designer), Renata Gordon (sculptor)
Reverse design
Patricia Lucas-Morris (designer), Michael Gaudioso (sculptor)
Authorized by
American Legion 100th Anniversary Commemorative Coin Act (Public Law 115-65, 2017)
Maximum authorized mintage
400,000 silver dollars
Reported sales
278,716 total — 219,015 proof, 59,701 uncirculated
Surcharge
$10 per coin, paid to the American Legion

Collecting it

This is a modern commemorative, so the rules are different from a 19th-century rarity. The U.S. Mint sold these directly to buyers for one year, then stopped — the dies were never used again. That makes the final sales number the effective mintage, and it's the figure that matters.

Congress allowed up to 400,000 silver dollars. The Mint reported sales of 278,716 — about 70% of the cap — split into 219,015 proofs and 59,701 uncirculated coins. The uncirculated version is the scarcer of the two by a wide margin, which is the kind of split that shapes long-term collector interest.

Because these were sold new and handled carefully, top grades are common. The collecting game here is less about finding a nice one and more about the very highest grades, the perfect-70 proofs, the special sets, and any first-day or signed labels. One detail worth knowing: 2019 was the year the U.S. Mint moved its commemorative silver dollars from the old 90% silver alloy to .999 fine silver. This coin is part of that transition — a small composition footnote that a seasoned collector will notice and a newcomer usually doesn't.

Questions collectors ask

Why is there a French symbol — a fleur-de-lis — on an American coin?

Because the American Legion was founded in Paris. After World War I, U.S. soldiers still stationed in France organized the Legion at a caucus there in March 1919. The fleur-de-lis, the historic emblem of France, marks that birthplace on the coin's reverse.

How many American Legion silver dollars were made?

Congress authorized up to 400,000. The U.S. Mint reported selling 278,716 — 219,015 proof and 59,701 uncirculated. Since the coins were only sold for 2019 and never struck again, that sales total is effectively the mintage.

What is the silver content of the 2019 American Legion dollar?

It is struck in .999 fine silver and weighs 26.73 grams, which is close to three-quarters of a troy ounce of pure silver. 2019 was the year the Mint switched its commemorative silver dollars from the older 90% silver alloy to .999 fine.

Where was it minted, and what's the mint mark?

Only at the Philadelphia Mint, so every coin carries a P mint mark. There is no Denver or San Francisco version of this dollar.

Did buying one actually help veterans?

Yes — by law, a $10 surcharge from each silver dollar sold was paid to the American Legion to support its programs for veterans and service members. The surcharge is built into the coin's price, not added on top.

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