The story behind the coin
In February 1920, a former pitcher named Andrew "Rube" Foster gathered a handful of team owners at the Paseo YMCA in Kansas City and founded the Negro National League — the first Black professional baseball league that actually lasted. For the next three decades, some of the greatest players who ever lived competed in leagues most white Americans never read about in the box scores.
A hundred years later, Congress decided that century deserved a coin. The Negro Leagues Baseball Centennial Commemorative Coin Act became Public Law 116-209 on December 4, 2020. It authorized three coins — a $5 gold piece, a silver dollar, and this copper-nickel half dollar — to mark the centennial and, just as importantly, to raise money for the place that keeps the story alive.
The pandemic pushed production back, so the coins meant for 2020 arrived in 2022 — the same year Buck O'Neil, the Negro Leagues' great ambassador and the driving force behind the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum, was finally inducted into the Hall of Fame. The timing felt right.