The story behind the coin
By 1991, Mount Rushmore had a problem most monuments don't: it was getting old. Gutzon Borglum's four presidents had stared out over the Black Hills for half a century, and the visitor facilities below them were worn thin by millions of tourists. The fix needed money. Congress found an old answer — a commemorative coin.
The Mount Rushmore Commemorative Coin Act (Public Law 101-332) authorized a three-coin program for the memorial's 50th anniversary: a clad half dollar, a 90% silver dollar, and a five-dollar gold piece. The U.S. Mint released them on February 15, 1991. The silver dollar is the heart of the set — big, heavy, and the one most people bought.
Here's the part that makes the coin more than a souvenir. Every dollar sold carried a surcharge of $7 on top of its price. Half of that went to the U.S. Treasury to chip away at the national debt; the other half went to the Mount Rushmore National Memorial Society of the Black Hills, to help repair and enlarge the very monument on the coin. You weren't just buying silver. You were funding the mountain.
The "golden anniversary" itself is a small history lesson. Borglum started carving in 1927 and worked until his death in early 1941; his son Lincoln finished the job that October. So the 1991 program marked 50 years since the work stopped — the moment the Shrine of Democracy became, finally, complete.