The story behind the coin
On the evening of March 12, 1912, in Savannah, Georgia, a hard-of-hearing widow named Juliette Gordon Low telephoned a friend and — as the story is often told — said she had "something for the girls of Savannah, and all America, and all the world." That night she gathered eighteen girls for the first meeting of what became the Girl Scouts of the USA. (The line is widely repeated and beloved; treat it as cherished tradition rather than a verbatim transcript.)
A century later, Congress decided that milestone deserved a coin. The Girl Scouts USA Centennial Commemorative Coin Act became law on October 29, 2009, directing the Treasury to strike a silver dollar in 2013 — the calendar year the centennial fell — and to issue no more than 350,000 of them.
That mintage cap was not a target. It turned out to be a ceiling the coin never came close to touching, and that gap has a sharp consequence — the most interesting thing about this dollar isn't on the coin at all. We'll get to it.