The story behind the coin
At dawn on April 18, 1906, the ground under San Francisco moved. The earthquake — later estimated near magnitude 7.8 — killed thousands and toppled tens of thousands of buildings. Then came the fires, which finished what the shaking started. The downtown banks, the heart of the city's money, were gone.
One building refused to fall: the San Francisco Mint. Inside its vaults sat a staggering amount of gold — by one account roughly a third of the entire U.S. gold reserve at the time. As the fire closed in, mint employees and U.S. Army soldiers fought it for hours with one-inch hoses fed by a well in the courtyard. They saved the building. They saved the gold.
That mattered far beyond the fireproofing. With every other bank destroyed, the surviving Mint became the only working financial institution in the city. It took in the relief money pouring in from across the country and paid it back out to rebuild San Francisco. A building meant to make money became the place that helped the city buy back its life.
A hundred years later, Congress decided that story deserved a coin. The San Francisco Old Mint Commemorative Coin Act — introduced by Representative Nancy Pelosi — was signed into law on June 15, 2006. It authorized a silver dollar and this $5 gold piece, the surcharges going to help restore the old building as a museum. The coin marks the centennial of the disaster the Mint outlasted.
