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The Apollo 11 Half Dollar — A Coin Shaped Like a Space Helmet

In 2019 the U.S. Mint bent a half dollar into a dome to put you back on the Moon.

Almost every coin you have ever held is flat. This one is not. To honor 50 years since the first walk on the Moon, the Mint pressed a half dollar into a curve — a bootprint sunk into the dish on one side, the bulge of an astronaut's visor swelling out the other.

A coin you can feel is different

Run your thumb across most coins and you feel a flat disc. Run it across this one and your thumb dips into a bowl. The 2019 Apollo 11 half dollar is curved — concave on the front, convex on the back — and that shape is the whole point.

The U.S. Mint had only ever done this once before, on the 2014 National Baseball Hall of Fame coins, where the dish was a baseball glove and the dome was a ball. For Apollo 11 the curve does something quieter and stranger. The dished side cradles a single bootprint, the way the lunar dust held the real one. The domed side swells out like the visor of a space helmet. You are not looking at a picture of the Moon landing. You are holding the shape of it.

Congress ordered the coin years in advance. President Obama signed the Apollo 11 50th Anniversary Commemorative Coin Act — Public Law 114-282 — on December 16, 2016, so the Mint would be ready for the anniversary of July 20, 1969, the day Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin set down in the Sea of Tranquility while Michael Collins orbited overhead. The coins went on sale January 24, 2019, the half-century mark of a moment that, for one afternoon, the whole planet watched at once.

The design — a bootprint and a visor

The obverse — the heads side, here the concave dish — carries a single astronaut's bootprint pressed into the lunar surface. Around it run the names of the three programs that built the road to the Moon: MERCURY, GEMINI, APOLLO, each separated by a phase of the Moon. It reads as a story in one glance — a decade of effort narrowing to one footstep.

That design came from outside the Mint. The Act required a public competition, and a Maine sculptor named Gary Cooper won it. His bootprint concept beat 17 other finalists, themselves chosen from 119 submissions by a jury drawn from the Commission of Fine Arts and the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee. Mint sculptor-engraver Joseph Menna prepared Cooper's design for striking.

The reverse — the tails side, the dome — is the part people remember. Mint sculptor Phebe Hemphill rendered a close crop of one of the most famous photographs ever taken: Buzz Aldrin's helmet on the Moon, shot by Armstrong. You see only the visor and part of the helmet, the visor given a mirrored finish. In that mirror, just as in the original photo, are the things reflected back at Aldrin — the lunar lander, the U.S. flag, and the small figure of Armstrong himself, camera raised. The man taking the picture is inside the picture. On the convex coin, that reflection bows toward you.

Key facts

Year struck
2019
Denomination
Half dollar (50 cents)
Composition
Copper-nickel clad (8.33% nickel, balance copper)
Weight / diameter
11.34 g / 30.61 mm
Shape
Curved — concave obverse, convex reverse
Obverse designer
Gary Cooper (competition winner); engraved by Joseph Menna
Reverse designer / engraver
Phebe Hemphill
Mints
Denver (D, uncirculated) · San Francisco (S, proof)
Authorized by
Public Law 114-282, signed Dec 16, 2016
Maximum authorized
750,000 clad half dollars
Sold — uncirculated (D)
≈41,742
Sold — proof (S)
≈166,299 total (≈99,998 of them in the Apollo 11 / Kennedy two-coin set)
Surcharge
$5 per coin — split among the Smithsonian Air & Space 'Destination Moon' exhibit, the Astronauts Memorial Foundation, and the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation

Collecting it

This is a modern commemorative, sold at a fixed price by the Mint for one year. So unlike a worn old Morgan dollar, scarcity here is not about survival — it's about how many people bought one and what condition it left the factory in. Roughly 41,000 uncirculated coins (the D mint mark) and about 166,000 proofs (the S mint mark) were sold. None of the four coins in the program sold out before sales closed on December 27, 2019.

A proof is a special collector strike — polished dies, hand-fed planchets, mirror fields and frosted devices. A regular uncirculated coin is struck for collectors too, but with an ordinary brilliant finish, not the mirror-and-frost contrast. The D coins are uncirculated; the S coins are proof. Grading services certify these on the 70-point scale, and because they were never meant to circulate, a large share survive in the top grades — MS70 (uncirculated) or PF70 (proof), the flawless tier. The hunt, for most collectors, is the perfect-70 example rather than a scarce date.

One offering stands out. The Mint paired the Apollo 11 proof half dollar with a 2019-S Kennedy half dollar struck in enhanced reverse proof — a finish that flips the usual proof contrast and adds laser-frosted detail — in a special two-coin set. Most of the proof Apollo 11 half dollars, close to 100,000, live inside that Kennedy set rather than on their own. It's the version that ties the coin to the man who, in 1961, set the goal of reaching the Moon "before this decade is out."

Every coin also carried a $5 surcharge that went to causes fitting the subject: the Smithsonian's "Destination Moon" exhibit, the Astronauts Memorial Foundation, and the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation. Buying the coin helped fund the telling of the story it depicts.

Questions collectors ask

Why is the Apollo 11 half dollar curved?

It was struck with a curved profile on purpose — concave on the front, convex on the back — so the design could work in three dimensions. The dished side cradles a lunar bootprint; the domed side swells like an astronaut's helmet visor. It was only the second U.S. coin ever made this way, after the 2014 Baseball Hall of Fame coins.

Is the Apollo 11 half dollar silver?

No. The half dollar is copper-nickel clad — the same base-metal sandwich as a circulating half dollar. The Apollo 11 program also included silver and gold coins, but the half dollar is clad. That keeps it the most affordable coin in the set.

Whose face is on the Apollo 11 half dollar?

No portrait, exactly. The reverse shows Buzz Aldrin's space helmet from a famous 1969 photo — you see the visor and helmet, not his face. The mirrored visor reflects the lunar lander, the U.S. flag, and Neil Armstrong taking the picture. The obverse has no person at all, just a single bootprint.

What's the difference between the 2019-D and 2019-S Apollo 11 half dollars?

The D (Denver) coin is the uncirculated version with a normal brilliant finish. The S (San Francisco) coin is the proof — mirror fields, frosted design, made for collectors. Both share the same curved shape and design.

How many Apollo 11 half dollars were made?

Congress authorized up to 750,000. Actual sales were lower: roughly 41,742 uncirculated (D) and about 166,299 proof (S), with close to 100,000 of those proofs sold inside a special two-coin set alongside a Kennedy half dollar. None of the program's coins sold out.

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