US coin · series

The US Marshals 225th Anniversary Half Dollar

Two lawmen, 225 years apart, struck onto one 2015 coin

In 1789, before there was an FBI or a Secret Service, George Washington signed a law that created the first federal lawmen in America. This half dollar — struck in 2015 to mark 225 years of the US Marshals Service — puts a frontier marshal and a modern one on the same small disc of metal.

The story behind the coin

The US Marshals Service is the oldest federal law enforcement agency in the country — older than the FBI, older than the country's modern borders, older than almost everything we think of as "the law."

It was born on September 24, 1789, in the same Judiciary Act that built the federal courts. George Washington appointed the first marshals — one for each of the original federal judicial districts — and handed them a job that was equal parts sheriff, bureaucrat, and bodyguard. They served subpoenas, guarded prisoners, paid the courts' bills, and even ran the very first national census in 1790.

In 2014 the Service turned 225. Congress had already cleared the way: on April 2, 2012, President Obama signed the United States Marshals Service 225th Anniversary Commemorative Coin Act — Public Law 112-104 — authorizing a three-coin set to mark the milestone. The half dollar was the affordable, copper-nickel member of that family, sitting alongside a silver dollar and a $5 gold piece. It went on sale in 2015, all of it carrying the dual dates 1789–2014.

A commemorative coin, in the US system, isn't pocket change. Congress has to pass a law to authorize each one, the Mint strikes a limited run for collectors, and a fixed surcharge on every coin goes to a cause named in the law. These coins exist to tell a story and raise money — not to make change at the grocery store.

What the coin shows

The obverse — the heads side — does something most coins don't: it spans 225 years in a single glance. On the upper left stands an Old West marshal, rifle in hand, beside his horse. On the lower right stands a modern marshal — a woman in tactical gear. One is the lawman of the frontier; the other is the agency as it is now. The dual dates 1789–2014, plus 2015, LIBERTY, and IN GOD WE TRUST, ring the design. It was drawn by Joel Iskowitz and engraved by Michael Gaudioso of the Mint.

The reverse — the tails side — is the more loaded image. Lady Justice, the classical figure of fairness, holds her scale in balance in one hand and the US Marshals Service star in the other. At her feet sit four objects, and each one is a chapter of marshal history: a copy of the Constitution, a stack of books, a jug of whiskey, and a pair of handcuffs — arranged over railroad tracks. It was designed by Susan Gamble and engraved by Phebe Hemphill.

Those objects aren't decoration. The authorizing law explicitly asked the artists to evoke the hard duties marshals took on across two centuries. The whiskey jug points to the Whiskey Rebellion of the 1790s, when marshals enforced the new nation's first tax. The books and the Constitution nod to their role escorting students through hostile crowds during school desegregation. The railroad tracks call back to the violent labor disputes of the industrial age, when marshals were sent to keep order. It is, quietly, one of the more thoughtful reverse designs of the modern commemorative era.

Key facts

Year issued
2015 (dual-dated 1789–2014)
Denomination
Half dollar (50 cents)
Composition
Copper-nickel clad copper
Weight / diameter
11.34 g / 30.61 mm, reeded edge
Obverse
Joel Iskowitz (design), Michael Gaudioso (engraving)
Reverse
Susan Gamble (design), Phebe Hemphill (engraving)
Authorized by
Public Law 112-104 (signed April 2, 2012)
Authorized maximum
750,000 across all half dollar options
Uncirculated mintage (2015-D)
30,231
Proof mintage (2015-S)
76,549
Surcharge
$3 per coin, to the US Marshals Museum and law-enforcement charities

Collecting it

Here's the surprise hiding inside a "modern" coin: it's scarcer than its age suggests. The law allowed up to 750,000 half dollars. Far fewer were actually bought. The uncirculated coin, struck at Denver and carrying a D mint mark — the small letter showing which mint made it — sold just 30,231. The proof, struck at San Francisco with an S mark, sold 76,549. (A proof is a specially made collector coin: polished dies and prepared blanks give it mirror fields and frosted devices.)

That uncirculated mintage of about 30,000 is genuinely low for a modern US coin. Among the 2015 Marshals program, the half dollar is the entry point — cheap to buy at issue — yet the small surviving population means the best-preserved examples carry real interest. Grade matters here: coins are scored on a 70-point scale, and pristine MS-70 (uncirculated) or PR-70 (proof) examples, with no flaws under magnification, sit well above ordinary pieces.

The other thing to know is what your purchase did. Every coin carried a $3 surcharge. The first $5 million went to the US Marshals Museum, then under construction in Fort Smith, Arkansas; the remainder was split among the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children, the Federal Law Enforcement Officers Association Foundation, and the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund. Buying this coin was, by design, a small donation with a souvenir attached.

Questions collectors ask

Is the 2015 US Marshals half dollar made of silver?

No. The half dollar is copper-nickel clad copper — the same non-precious composition as a circulating Kennedy half dollar. Only the $1 (silver) and $5 (gold) coins in the 2015 Marshals program contain precious metal. The half dollar was the program's affordable option.

Why is the mintage so low for a recent coin?

Congress authorized up to 750,000 half dollars, but collectors bought far fewer. The uncirculated 2015-D sold only 30,231 and the 2015-S proof 76,549. Demand, not the legal limit, set the real number — and that makes the uncirculated coin genuinely scarce for a modern issue.

What do the objects on the reverse mean?

Each is a piece of marshal history. The whiskey jug recalls the Whiskey Rebellion, the books and Constitution recall escorting students during desegregation, and the railroad tracks recall the labor disputes marshals were sent to police. Lady Justice holds the Marshals Service star and a balanced scale above them.

What's the difference between the 2015-D and 2015-S coins?

The D (Denver) coin is the uncirculated version; the S (San Francisco) coin is the proof, struck on polished dies for a mirror finish. They share the same designs and the same dual date, 1789–2014. The proof had a higher mintage but a more elaborate finish.

Where did the surcharge money go?

The $3 per-coin surcharge was directed by law: the first $5 million to the US Marshals Museum in Fort Smith, Arkansas, then the rest split among the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children, the Federal Law Enforcement Officers Association Foundation, and the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund.

Sources