US coin · series

The Coin That Put 'Happiness' in Your Hand

In 2020 the U.S. Mint engraved one handwritten word from the Declaration of Independence onto an ounce of platinum — and closed a three-year experiment.

Most coins show a face or a building. This one shows a word — "Happiness," copied straight from the looping handwriting of the Declaration of Independence. It was the third and final act of the most ambitious platinum series the U.S. Mint had ever attempted.

The story behind the coin

For more than two decades, the American Platinum Eagle was a coin that barely changed. From its 1997 debut it carried the same Statue of Liberty face year after year — handsome, but predictable.

In 2018 the U.S. Mint did something it had never done with this coin. It launched a three-year story told across three coins, each tied to a phrase the founders thought was worth fighting for: Life (2018), Liberty (2019), and the Pursuit of Happiness (2020). The Mint called the program "Preamble to the Declaration of Independence."

This coin is the finale. By 2020 the country was about to be turned upside down by a pandemic, and "the pursuit of happiness" — an idea Thomas Jefferson borrowed and made famous — landed with a weight nobody planned. The coin went on sale on January 30, 2020, just before the world changed.

What makes the series unusual is the engineering of the idea. Instead of changing the back of the coin year to year, the Mint changed the front — the obverse, the heads side — three times while keeping one shared eagle on the reverse (the tails side). For a program that had shown the same face since 1997, that was a quiet revolution.

The design

The obverse shows Lady Liberty as a worker, not a statue. Across the three coins she plants seeds, then lights the way west, then — on this final coin — gathers the harvest beside an overflowing cornucopia, with a young girl at play nearby. The message is plain: happiness is what you reap after the work of liberty is done.

Tucked into the design is the clever part. The word "Happiness" is rendered as a likeness of the actual handwriting from the Declaration of Independence — not a typeface, but the founders' own pen strokes. The 2018 and 2019 coins did the same with "Life" and "Liberty." Read together, the three coins quote the document one word at a time.

Here is the detail collectors love: a single artist, Justin Kunz, designed all three obverses at once, so the trio would read as one story rather than three separate commissions. That had never been done for this coin before. The shared reverse — an eagle in flight clutching an olive branch — was designed by Patricia Lucas-Morris and sculpted by Don Everhart.

Every coin was struck at the West Point Mint, marked with a mint mark — the small letter that says where a coin was made — of W. As a proof, each was struck on a polished blank with specially prepared dies to give mirror-bright fields and frosted, sculpted detail.

Key facts

Year struck
2020 (one year only)
Denomination
$100 (legal tender; bullion value far exceeds face)
Composition
1 troy oz, .9995 fine platinum
Diameter
32.7 mm (1.29 in)
Mint / mark
West Point — mint mark W
Finish
Proof
Obverse designer
Justin Kunz
Reverse
Patricia Lucas-Morris (design), Don Everhart (sculptor)
Series
Preamble to the Declaration of Independence (2018 Life, 2019 Liberty, 2020 Happiness)
Mintage limit
13,000 (final sales reported lower)
Issue price
$1,545 (at January 2020 launch)
On sale
January 30, 2020 — limit one per household

Collecting it

This is a modern coin, so there is no rusted hoard or wreck story here — its appeal is scarcity and completeness. The Mint capped production at 13,000 pieces, and the series sold lukewarm. The 2018 "Life" coin sold roughly 13,600 of a 20,000 cap; the 2019 "Liberty" coin moved fewer than 10,000. Reporting on the 2020 finale points to a final figure in the same modest range — well under the 13,000 ceiling — though you should treat the exact audited number as still firming up rather than settled.

That soft demand is the collector's angle. A coin that struggled to sell when new is, by definition, scarce now. And because the three obverses were designed as one story, the prize is the complete three-coin set — Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness together. The 2020 coin is the one that closes it.

For grade, look for proof examples in the top certified tiers. Because these were sold as collector proofs and handled carefully, flawless coins exist — but flawless platinum proofs in their original Mint packaging, with paperwork intact, are what carry the premium over melt value.

Questions collectors ask

Is the 2020 Pursuit of Happiness eagle gold?

No — it is platinum, .9995 fine, one troy ounce. It is often confused with gold because of its $100 denomination and golden-toned marketing photos, but the metal is platinum and it was struck at West Point.

What is the 'Preamble to the Declaration of Independence' series?

A three-year run of proof platinum eagles from 2018 to 2020. Each coin features one word from the Declaration in the founders' handwriting — Life (2018), Liberty (2019), and Happiness (2020) — with a shared eagle-in-flight reverse. It was the first time the Platinum Eagle changed its obverse design year to year instead of keeping one fixed face.

Who designed the coin?

Justin Kunz designed the obverse — and he designed all three obverses in the series at once so they would tell a single story. The shared reverse was designed by Patricia Lucas-Morris and sculpted by Don Everhart.

How many were made?

The U.S. Mint set a maximum mintage of 13,000. Final sales came in below that limit, in line with the soft demand the whole series saw. The precise audited figure is best confirmed against current Mint sales reports.

Why does a platinum coin say $100?

$100 is its legal face value as U.S. currency. The platinum in it is worth far more — the face value is a formality, not its price. This is normal for modern bullion-grade coins.

Sources