US coin · series

The 2017 Lions Clubs International Centennial Silver Dollar

A coin that turned 100 years of service into ten dollars of it, one piece at a time.

In 1917 a Chicago insurance man asked his business club a simple question: what if a club existed to help other people, not just its own members? A century later, the U.S. Mint struck a silver dollar to answer him.

The story behind the coin

In 1917, Melvin Jones was a 38-year-old insurance agent in Chicago with an unusual idea. His business club, like most, existed to help its members. Jones thought a club could aim higher — at the town it sat in, and the world beyond it. On June 7, 1917, delegates from a scattering of clubs met at Chicago's Hotel LaSalle and formed the Association of Lions Clubs.

What followed turned that idea into the largest service-club organization on Earth. The turning point came in 1925, when Helen Keller stood before the Lions convention in Cedar Point, Ohio, and challenged them to become "knights of the blind in the crusade against darkness." The Lions took it to heart. Sight and blindness prevention became their signature cause and remain so today.

A hundred years after that first meeting, Congress marked the milestone with money. The 2017 Lions Clubs International Centennial Silver Dollar is a commemorative — a coin Congress authorizes for a special occasion, sold to the public at a premium rather than spent at face value. It was never meant to jingle in a pocket. It was meant to honor a century of service, and to fund a little more of it.

The design

The obverse — the heads side — puts Melvin Jones front and center, shown in three-quarter profile in his glasses, beside the Lions Clubs International emblem. The inscriptions name him plainly: "MELVIN JONES FOUNDER." It was designed by Joel Iskowitz of the Mint's Artistic Infusion Program (the outside-artist pool the Mint draws on for fresh design work) and sculpted by Mint engraver Joseph Menna.

The reverse — the tails side — is the warmer image. A male and female lion stand with their cub, the family superimposed over a globe, beneath the legend "CELEBRATING 100 YEARS OF SERVICE." It reads as both literal (lions, the club's namesake) and emblematic (one organization, reaching across the whole world). That side was designed by Patricia Lucas-Morris and sculpted by veteran Mint engraver Don Everhart.

It is a 90% silver dollar in the classic American commemorative format — the same heft and diameter as the silver dollars the Mint has struck for these occasions since the 1980s.

Key facts

Year struck
2017
Mint mark
P (Philadelphia)
Denomination
$1 (commemorative — sold at a premium, not spent)
Authorizing law
Public Law 112-181 — Lions Clubs International Century of Service Commemorative Coin Act (2012)
Obverse
Melvin Jones, Lions founder — Joel Iskowitz (design), Joseph Menna (sculpt)
Reverse
Lion family over a globe — Patricia Lucas-Morris (design), Don Everhart (sculpt)
Composition
90% silver, 10% copper
Weight
26.73 g (0.7736 oz pure silver)
Diameter
38.1 mm
Maximum authorized
400,000 coins (proof + uncirculated combined)
Proof sold
68,519
Uncirculated sold
17,247
Surcharge
$10 per coin to the Lions Clubs International Foundation

Collecting it

There is only one year, one mint, and two finishes — so the collecting story is unusually simple. You choose between the proof (struck on polished dies for a mirror-and-frost contrast, made for collectors) and the uncirculated (a satin business-style strike). Both wear the Philadelphia "P" mint mark.

The number that catches a collector's eye is the split. The Mint was authorized to make up to 400,000 coins, but demand fell far short: just 68,519 proofs and 17,247 uncirculated pieces sold. That uncirculated figure is the interesting one — fewer than 18,000 coins is genuinely low for a modern commemorative, which is why the uncirculated version tends to draw more attention than its proof sibling.

As with all of these commemoratives, condition is the lever. Coins graded at the top of the scale — a flawless MS70 or PR70 — command a premium over the same coin a grade or two down, because so few survive a strike, a journey, and a grader's loupe without a single mark. The metal itself sets a floor: each coin holds about three-quarters of an ounce of silver, so it can never be worth less than its silver on the day.

Every coin also carried a built-in act of charity. A $10 surcharge from each one sold went to the Lions Clubs International Foundation — the coin didn't just commemorate a century of service, it funded a sliver more of it.

Questions collectors ask

What does the 2017 Lions Clubs silver dollar commemorate?

The 100th anniversary of Lions Clubs International, the service organization founded in Chicago in 1917 by Melvin Jones. The U.S. Mint struck it under Public Law 112-181 to mark the centennial.

Who is the man on the front of the coin?

Melvin Jones, the Chicago insurance man who founded the Association of Lions Clubs in 1917. He's shown in three-quarter profile in his glasses, beside the Lions emblem, on the obverse (heads side).

Is the 2017 Lions Club dollar real silver?

Yes. It's 90% silver, 10% copper, weighs 26.73 grams, and contains about 0.7736 troy ounces of pure silver — so its silver content sets a floor under its value.

Which is rarer, the proof or the uncirculated?

The uncirculated. The Mint sold 68,519 proofs but only 17,247 uncirculated coins. That low uncirculated figure is why it draws extra collector interest, even though both are far below the 400,000 the Mint was allowed to make.

Where was it minted and does it have a mint mark?

Philadelphia. It carries a 'P' mint mark, as commemorative silver dollars of this era did.

Did buying the coin support a cause?

Yes. A $10 surcharge from every coin sold went to the Lions Clubs International Foundation to support its service programs.

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