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The 1995 Paralympic Silver Dollar — Triumph of the Human Spirit

A blind runner, her guide, and the word "Spirit" written in Braille on a U.S. coin.

In 1995 the U.S. Mint struck a silver dollar that asked you to read it with your fingertips. On the heads side, a blind runner races tethered to a sighted guide; nearby, raised dots spell out one word — "Spirit." It was the first time the Paralympic movement appeared on an American silver dollar, and it nearly slipped past the collectors it was made for.

The story behind the coin

Atlanta won the 1996 Summer Olympics — the Centennial Games, a hundred years after the modern Olympics began — and Congress decided to pay for part of it the old-fashioned way: by selling coins. In 1992 it passed the 1996 Atlanta Centennial Olympic Games Commemorative Coin Act (Public Law 102-390), authorizing a sprawling sixteen-coin program split across 1995 and 1996. Two half dollars, four silver dollars, and two gold coins each year, each one honoring a sport or a theme.

The money mattered. A surcharge — an extra amount baked into each coin's price, on top of its silver value — went to the people staging the Games: the Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games and the United States Olympic Committee. Buy the coin, fund the Games. That was the deal Congress wrote.

Among that crowd of sports, one 1995 dollar honored something the Olympics had long kept at arm's length: the Paralympics. Atlanta would host the 1996 Paralympic Games right after the Olympics, on the same tracks and in the same pools. Putting a Paralympic athlete on legal tender was a quiet statement — that these Games, and these athletes, counted too.

What the coin shows

The obverse — the heads side — is the one people remember. Two runners stride forward, joined at the wrist by a short tether: a blind sprinter and the sighted guide who runs beside her, matching her stride for stride. Above and around them runs the theme of the whole piece: TRIUMPH OF THE HUMAN SPIRIT, with PARALYMPICS, LIBERTY, and IN GOD WE TRUST. The Paralympic logo sits in the field — and so does something you almost never see on money: the word "Spirit" rendered in raised Braille dots, meant to be felt, not just seen.

That obverse was designed by James C. Sharpe and sculpted into the working model by Mint sculptor-engraver Thomas D. Rogers. (A coin's designer draws the image; the sculptor-engraver turns that drawing into the three-dimensional relief that becomes the die — the hardened steel stamp that strikes the coin.)

The reverse — the tails side — answers the obverse with a simpler image: two clasped hands, a handshake standing for brotherhood and shared effort, beneath the Atlanta Games logo. It carries UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, E PLURIBUS UNUM, ATLANTA, and the denomination, ONE DOLLAR. The reverse was designed by William Krawczewicz and sculpted by T. James Ferrell.

Key facts

Year struck
1995
Denomination
Silver dollar ($1)
Theme
Atlanta 1996 Paralympic Games — "Triumph of the Human Spirit"
Obverse
Blind runner tethered to a sighted guide; Paralympic logo; "Spirit" in Braille
Obverse artists
Designed by James C. Sharpe; sculpted by Thomas D. Rogers
Reverse
Clasped hands beneath the Atlanta Games logo
Reverse artists
Designed by William Krawczewicz; sculpted by T. James Ferrell
Composition
90% silver, 10% copper
Weight
26.73 g
Diameter
38.1 mm
Edge
Reeded
1995-D (Uncirculated)
28,649 struck
1995-P (Proof)
138,337 struck
Authorizing act
1996 Atlanta Centennial Olympic Games Commemorative Coin Act (P.L. 102-390, 1992)
Surcharge beneficiaries
Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games & U.S. Olympic Committee

Collecting the 1995 Paralympic dollar

This coin came in two flavors, and the difference is worth knowing. The Denver Mint struck the uncirculated version (mint mark D) — a normal business-style finish. The Philadelphia Mint struck the proof version (mint mark P) — proofs are made for collectors, with mirror-bright fields and frosted devices, from specially prepared dies. Only 28,649 of the uncirculated D dollars were struck, against 138,337 of the P proofs, which makes the uncirculated 1995-D the harder of the two to find.

Here's the larger reason the whole 1995–1996 Olympic program runs scarce: it asked too much of its buyers. Sixteen coins over two years was a lot of money to spend, and collectors got worn out. Numismatic writers point to that "collector fatigue" to explain why sales fell far short of the authorized ceilings, leaving genuinely low mintages behind. Coins meant for a mass audience ended up scarcer than coins designed to be rare.

One caution that trips people up: don't confuse this 1995 "blind runner" dollar with the 1996 Paralympic dollar, which shows a wheelchair racer and is a different coin entirely. The 1996-D uncirculated piece, at roughly 14,497 struck, is the famous rarity of the program — far scarcer than this 1995 issue. They're easy to mix up because both say "Paralympics." Check the date and the image: a tethered runner means 1995; a wheelchair athlete means 1996.

Questions collectors ask

Why is there Braille on the 1995 Paralympic dollar?

The obverse spells the word "Spirit" in raised Braille dots — a deliberate nod to the blind and visually impaired athletes the coin honors. It is one of the very few U.S. coins designed to be read by touch as well as by sight.

What does "Triumph of the Human Spirit" mean on the coin?

It was the theme of the design, inscribed on the obverse around the two runners. It frames the Paralympic athlete's effort — a blind sprinter racing tethered to a sighted guide — as the human spirit overcoming limits.

Is the 1995 Paralympic dollar the same as the 1996 one?

No. The 1995 dollar shows a blind runner and her guide; the 1996 dollar shows a wheelchair racer. They are separate coins from the same Atlanta program. The 1996-D uncirculated version, at about 14,497 struck, is the much rarer of the two.

Who designed the 1995 Paralympic silver dollar?

James C. Sharpe designed the obverse (the runners), sculpted by U.S. Mint engraver Thomas D. Rogers. William Krawczewicz designed the reverse (the clasped hands), sculpted by T. James Ferrell.

Why was this coin made — what did buying it pay for?

It was a fundraiser. A surcharge on each coin went to the Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games and the U.S. Olympic Committee to help stage the 1996 Centennial Games, under the law Congress passed in 1992.

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