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The Apollo 11 $5 Gold Coin: a coin curved like the Moon's horizon

In 2019, the U.S. Mint domed a gold coin so a footprint and a visor could face each other across fifty years.

To mark fifty years since two men walked on the Moon, the U.S. Mint did something it had only done once before: it curved the coin. One face caves inward, the other bulges out — and on those two domed surfaces sit a bootprint pressed into lunar dust and the reflection caught in an astronaut's helmet.

The story behind the coin

On July 20, 1969, Neil Armstrong stepped off a ladder and left a print in gray dust that no wind would ever erase. Fifty years later, Congress decided that moment deserved a coin — and not an ordinary one.

The idea came from outside Washington. An Iowa man named Mike Olson pitched a curved Apollo coin to his congressman; the proposal reached Representative Bill Posey of Florida, whose district includes the Space Coast. Posey introduced the bill in 2015, and on December 16, 2016, President Obama signed it into law as Public Law 114-282, the Apollo 11 50th Anniversary Commemorative Coin Act.

The law ordered four coins for one anniversary: a tiny clad half dollar, a silver dollar, a giant five-ounce silver piece, and this one — the $5 gold. By law, every one of them had to be curved, concave on the front and convex on the back. The shape was the point. A flat disc commemorates an event; a domed one evokes it — the swell of a space helmet, the bulge of a planet seen from orbit. The coins went on sale on January 24, 2019, and came off sale on December 27 of that year.

The design: a footprint and a visor

The Mint ran an open competition for the front — the obverse, the "heads" side. A Maine sculptor named Gary Cooper won it with a deceptively simple idea: no portrait, no rocket, just a single bootprint sunk into the lunar surface. Above it run the names of the programs that built toward that step — MERCURY, GEMINI, APOLLO — divided by the phases of the Moon. Because the obverse is concave, the footprint sits at the bottom of a shallow bowl, as if the coin itself were the dust being pressed. Mint sculptor-engraver Joseph Menna adapted Cooper's drawing into the working die.

The back — the reverse, the "tails" side — is the showstopper, and it belongs to Mint sculptor-engraver Phebe Hemphill. She rendered a close-up of one of the most famous photographs ever taken: Buzz Aldrin standing on the Moon, shot by Armstrong. But Hemphill zoomed into the visor of Aldrin's helmet. In its curved gold reflection you can find Armstrong himself, the American flag, and the lunar module Eagle. The convex face does the work a flat coin never could — it mimics the bulge of a real visor, so the reflection wraps around the surface the way it wrapped around Aldrin's helmet that day.

This curving was a feat of manufacturing, not just art. The Mint had pulled it off only once before, on the 2014 National Baseball Hall of Fame commemoratives, where the concave obverse cupped like a catcher's mitt and the convex reverse rose like a baseball. Here the same trick serves the Moon.

Key facts

Year & mint
2019-W (West Point)
Denomination
$5 (gold half eagle, commemorative)
Obverse design
Gary Cooper (competition winner); engraved by Joseph Menna
Reverse design
Phebe Hemphill (design and engraving)
Composition
.900 fine gold (90% gold, balance silver and copper)
Weight
8.359 g — .2419 troy oz actual gold
Diameter
21.59 mm (0.850 in); curved blank
Shape
Concave obverse, convex reverse (domed)
Authorizing law
Public Law 114-282 (2016)
Maximum mintage
50,000 (proof and uncirculated combined)
Surcharge
$35 per coin, to the Smithsonian, Astronauts Memorial Foundation, and Astronaut Scholarship Foundation

Collecting it

This is a modern commemorative, which changes the math. There are no rare die varieties to hunt and no mystery about where it was struck — every gold piece came from West Point and wears a W mint mark (a small letter showing the minting facility). What matters here is how few were made and how well they survived.

The law capped the gold coin at 50,000 pieces across both finishes. The Mint never came close to selling them all. Final sales reported in early 2021 stood near 12,035 uncirculated coins and roughly 32,862 proofs — together well under the cap, which makes the uncirculated version the scarcer of the two. (Sources vary slightly on the proof figure; the early-2021 Mint accounting is the most authoritative.)

Because these coins were sold mint-fresh in protective packaging, top grades are common — but not automatic. The grade collectors chase is the perfect one: MS70 for the uncirculated coin or PR70 (also written PF70) for the proof, meaning a coin with no flaws visible under magnification. A "70" sells for a real premium over a "69." Watch, too, for the curved fields: the domed surfaces show every hairline, so a flawless example genuinely earned its grade. Most of this coin's value rides on its gold content and its grade rather than on rarity — it is collected for what it honors, and for the quiet ambition of its shape.

Questions collectors ask

Why is the Apollo 11 $5 coin curved?

Congress required it. The 2016 law that authorized the program ordered curved coins — concave on the front, convex on the back — to evoke a space helmet and a planet's curve. The convex reverse lets the reflection in Buzz Aldrin's visor wrap around the surface the way it did on the real helmet. The Mint had only managed the curved-blank technique once before, on the 2014 Baseball Hall of Fame coins.

Who designed the Apollo 11 50th Anniversary gold coin?

The footprint obverse was designed by Maine sculptor Gary Cooper, who won a public design competition, and engraved by U.S. Mint sculptor-engraver Joseph Menna. The reverse — the close-up of Aldrin's visor — was designed and engraved by Mint sculptor-engraver Phebe Hemphill.

How many were made, and is it rare?

The mintage was capped at 50,000 across the proof and uncirculated finishes, but the Mint sold far fewer — around 12,035 uncirculated and about 32,862 proof coins. That makes the uncirculated coin the scarcer one, though neither is rare in the way a century-old gold piece is. It's valued more for its subject, its gold, and its grade.

What does the reflection on the back show?

It's a close-up of the famous photograph Neil Armstrong took of Buzz Aldrin on the Moon, zoomed into Aldrin's helmet visor. In the visor's reflection you can find Armstrong, the American flag, and the lunar module Eagle.

What is the gold content of the coin?

It's struck in .900 fine gold and weighs 8.359 grams, which works out to about .2419 troy ounces of actual gold — the standard size for a modern U.S. $5 commemorative half eagle.

Sources