US coin · series

The 1996 Swimming Half Dollar: the Olympic coin almost nobody bought

Authorized for three million. Struck just 49,533 in uncirculated — and that scarcity is exactly why collectors chase it now.

In 1996 the U.S. Mint was allowed to make three million Swimming half dollars. It made 49,533. By the time this little Olympic coin reached collectors, they were exhausted — and that exhaustion turned an overlooked half dollar into one of the rarest commemoratives of the modern era.

The story behind the coin

In 1996 the Olympic Games came to Atlanta, and they came with a flood of coins.

To mark the 100th anniversary of the modern Olympics, Congress authorized not one commemorative coin but sixteen — a sprawling two-year program of half dollars, silver dollars, and gold five-dollar pieces, each honoring a different sport or theme. It was the largest single commemorative coin program the United States had ever attempted. The Swimming half dollar was one small entry near the end of it.

By the time it went on sale, collectors were worn out. Buying all sixteen coins, in both proof and uncirculated, in silver and gold, ran into thousands of dollars. Most people simply stopped keeping up. The 1996 issues sold far worse than the 1995 ones — and the Swimming half, a humble fifty-cent piece arriving in the program's exhausted final stretch, sold worst of all.

The Mint struck only 49,533 uncirculated examples. That is the lowest mintage of any U.S. commemorative half dollar struck in the modern era — the run of commemoratives that began in 1982. A coin authorized for three million ended up scarcer than almost anyone intended. The neglect at the sales counter is precisely what makes it prized at the auction block today.

The design

The obverse — the heads side — shows a single swimmer caught mid-stroke, body cutting through the water, the moment of effort frozen in metal. It was designed by William Krawczewicz, an American artist who worked at both the U.S. Mint and the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, and whose hand is also on the 2000 Maryland state quarter and the obverse of the 1993 Bill of Rights silver dollar. Around the swimmer run the required legends — LIBERTY, IN GOD WE TRUST, and the date.

The reverse — the tails side — was designed by Malcolm Farley, a sports artist. Numismatic catalogues describe it as the Olympic flame, the Games' logo, and the number "100" arranged into the shape of a torch — the centennial of the modern Games rendered as a single burning image. The inscriptions name the United States of America, ATLANTA 1996, and the denomination.

It is a clad coin, not silver: an outer layer of copper-nickel bonded to a pure copper core, the same sandwich used in everyday circulating coinage. The "S" mint mark tells you it was struck in San Francisco, the Mint facility that handled the program's half dollars.

Key facts

Year struck
1996
Denomination
Half dollar (50 cents)
Mint
San Francisco (S mint mark)
Obverse designer
William Krawczewicz (swimmer)
Reverse designer
Malcolm Farley (Olympic flame / torch motif)
Composition
Copper-nickel clad copper
Weight
11.34 g
Diameter
30.61 mm
Edge
Reeded
Uncirculated mintage
49,533 — lowest of any modern U.S. commemorative half
Proof mintage
114,315
Maximum authorized
3,000,000
Program
1996 Atlanta Centennial Olympic Games — 16 coins, Public Law 102-390

Collecting it

For a coin only a few decades old, this one carries a real story of scarcity — and that story lives in the difference between two numbers.

The uncirculated version, struck at just 49,533 pieces, is the prize. It outsold by the proof version (114,315 struck) — an unusual flip, because collectors of that era usually bought more proofs than business strikes. Here, the uncirculated coin is the harder of the two to find, and it commands the premium. It is routinely cited as the lowest-mintage uncirculated commemorative half of the entire modern series.

Because these coins were sold straight to collectors and never circulated, almost every survivor is in high grade. That changes what matters: condition does the sorting. The serious money concentrates in the top grades — MS-69 and the elusive MS-70 (a flawless coin under magnification) — where a small grade jump can mean a large price jump. For the proof version, the equivalent ceiling is PR-70 Deep Cameo, a perfect proof with frosted devices against mirror fields.

A practical note for newcomers: "Swimming" is one of sixteen Atlanta coins, and the half dollars alone include a near-twin, the 1996 Soccer half. Check the design and the date — the low-mintage one you want is the swimmer, dated 1996, with the "S" mint mark.

Questions collectors ask

Why is the 1996 Swimming half dollar so scarce?

It arrived at the tail end of a giant 16-coin Olympic program, and collectors were worn out by the cost of keeping up. The 1996 issues sold far worse than the 1995 ones, and the Swimming half sold worst of all — only 49,533 uncirculated coins were struck against an authorized maximum of three million.

How many 1996 Swimming half dollars were made?

49,533 in uncirculated (business strike) and 114,315 in proof, all at the San Francisco Mint. The uncirculated figure is the lowest mintage of any U.S. commemorative half dollar from the modern era that began in 1982.

Is the 1996 Swimming half dollar made of silver?

No. It is a clad coin — an outer layer of copper-nickel bonded to a copper core, the same composition as circulating half dollars. The silver in the Atlanta program is in the dollar coins, not the halves.

Who designed the 1996 Swimming half dollar?

William Krawczewicz designed the obverse, the swimmer mid-stroke. Malcolm Farley designed the reverse, an Olympic flame and torch motif marking the centennial of the modern Games.

What's the difference between the uncirculated and proof versions?

Both were struck in San Francisco. The proof is the polished, mirror-field collector strike (114,315 made); the uncirculated is the standard business-strike finish (49,533 made). Unusually, the uncirculated is the scarcer and more sought-after of the two here.

Sources