The story behind the coin
On April 2, 1792, Congress passed the Coinage Act and built the nation's first mint in Philadelphia — the first federal building raised under the new Constitution. That single law gave the young United States its own money. Two hundred and twenty-five years later, in 2017, the Mint decided to throw itself a birthday party in gold.
The result was the American Liberty 225th Anniversary Gold Coin: a $100 coin holding one full ounce of pure gold. It was a commemorative — a coin made to honor an occasion rather than to jingle in a pocket — and the occasion was the Mint's own long history.
But the coin became famous for the figure on its face. For more than two centuries, Liberty on American coins had been a classical ideal: a stately woman, usually read as white, borrowed from Greek and Roman art. Here, for the first time, the Mint deliberately portrayed Liberty as a young African American woman wearing a crown of stars. The choice drew praise and pushback in equal measure, and it put a quiet question on a piece of gold: who, exactly, does "Liberty" look like?
