The story behind the coin
In the summer of 1996, the Olympic flame came to Atlanta for the Centennial Games — a hundred years after the modern Olympics began in 1896. The United States wanted to mark the moment in metal, and Congress obliged in a big way.
The 1996 Atlanta Centennial Olympic Games Commemorative Coin Act — Public Law 102-390, signed on October 6, 1992 — authorized not one coin but sixteen: four clad half dollars, eight silver dollars, and four gold half eagles, released across 1995 and 1996. It was one of the most ambitious commemorative programs the U.S. Mint had ever attempted.
Here is the twist. A commemorative coin isn't pocket change — it's a legal-tender keepsake the Mint sells above face value, with a built-in surcharge (an extra fee baked into the price) that goes to a designated cause. For the Atlanta coins, those surcharges were split between the Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games and the United States Olympic Committee. The coins were meant to help fund the Games themselves.
Sixteen coins at premium prices, all at once, was simply too much. Collectors couldn't — or wouldn't — buy the whole set, and sales slumped. The result is what numismatists politely call collector fatigue, and it left several of these coins with strikingly low mintages. The High Jump dollar is one of the most extreme cases.