US coin · series

The American Legion 100th Anniversary $5 Gold Coin

A Paris landmark and a wartime salute, struck in gold for the Legion's first hundred years.

In the spring of 1919, a few hundred American soldiers met in Paris to build something that would outlast the war they had just survived. A century later, the U.S. Mint put the Eiffel Tower on a tiny gold coin to mark the day — and sold fewer of them than almost anyone expected.

The story behind the coin

The American Legion was not born in America. It was born in Paris.

In March 1919, with the guns of the First World War only months silent, members of the American Expeditionary Forces — the U.S. troops who had fought in France — gathered in the French capital to figure out what came next. Millions of men were about to go home. They wanted an organization that would speak for veterans, care for the wounded, and keep faith with the dead. That meeting became The American Legion, chartered by Congress later the same year.

A hundred years on, in 2019, the U.S. Mint marked the centennial with a three-coin program: a clad half dollar, a silver dollar, and this — a small gold coin worth five dollars at face value but built almost entirely of gold. It is a commemorative: a coin Congress authorizes for a specific occasion, sold to collectors at a premium rather than spent at a store. Buy one and a fixed surcharge goes to the cause it honors — here, to the Legion itself.

So this coin does two things at once. It tells the story of where the Legion began, and it quietly raised money for the work the Legion still does.

The design

The obverse — the heads side — sends you straight back to that founding moment in France. At its center stands the Eiffel Tower, with a "V" for victory rising over it, framed by the angular geometric border lifted from the Legion's own emblem. It is an unusual choice for an American coin: a foreign monument as the hero image. But it is honest. The Legion really did begin in the shadow of that tower, in the country where its founders had fought. The obverse was designed by Chris Costello and sculpted by Phebe Hemphill of the Mint's engraving staff.

The reverse — the tails side — turns homeward. A bald eagle climbs through the field, the American Legion emblem set above it. Where the obverse remembers the war, the reverse points to the century of peacetime service that followed. It was designed by Paul C. Balan and sculpted by Joseph Menna, who would later become the Mint's Chief Engraver.

Two dates anchor the whole coin: 1919 and 2019. A hundred years, bridged by a single piece of gold.

Key facts

Year struck
2019
Mint mark
W (West Point)
Denomination
$5 (gold half eagle)
Obverse
Chris Costello (design) · Phebe Hemphill (sculpt)
Reverse
Paul C. Balan (design) · Joseph Menna (sculpt)
Composition
90% gold, 6% silver, 4% copper
Weight
8.359 g (~0.242 troy oz actual gold)
Diameter
21.6 mm
Edge
Reeded
Authorizing act
American Legion 100th Anniversary Commemorative Coin Act (Public Law 115–65, 2017)
Maximum authorized
50,000 gold coins
Surcharge
$35 per coin, paid to The American Legion
Proof sold (2019)
10,916
Uncirculated sold (2019)
2,929

Collecting it

Here is what makes this coin interesting to collectors: almost nobody bought it.

Congress allowed the Mint to strike up to 50,000 of these gold coins. By the end of 2019, sales told a different story — about 10,916 proof coins and 2,929 uncirculated coins, fewer than 14,000 in all. A proof is a special collector strike, made with polished dies and planchets for a mirror finish; the uncirculated version has a softer, satin look. Both came nowhere near the cap.

That low take-up is the headline for collectors. Modern commemorative gold often sells modestly, but the American Legion uncirculated coin in particular has one of the smaller sale totals among recent issues — under three thousand pieces. Scarcity at the time of sale doesn't guarantee a high price later, and much of any value sits in the gold itself (roughly a quarter ounce). But for collectors who chase low original-distribution numbers rather than headline rarities, this is exactly the kind of coin that gets noticed.

When you see one in a graded holder, the grade and finish (proof versus uncirculated) are what to read first — they separate the two issues, and the uncirculated is the harder of the two to find.

Questions collectors ask

Why is there an Eiffel Tower on an American coin?

Because the American Legion was founded in Paris in March 1919, by U.S. soldiers still in France after the First World War. The obverse puts the Eiffel Tower and a 'V for victory' front and center to honor that founding moment.

How much gold is in the American Legion $5 coin?

It is a standard modern U.S. $5 gold commemorative: 90% gold, weighing 8.359 grams, with roughly 0.242 troy ounces of actual gold. The 'W' mint mark means it was struck at West Point.

How many were made?

Congress authorized up to 50,000 gold coins, but actual sales were far lower — about 10,916 proof and 2,929 uncirculated through 2019, fewer than 14,000 combined.

What was the surcharge for?

Each gold coin carried a $35 surcharge, which the Mint paid to The American Legion to support its programs. That fundraising is the whole point of a commemorative coin program.

Who designed it?

The obverse was designed by Chris Costello and sculpted by Phebe Hemphill; the reverse was designed by Paul C. Balan and sculpted by Joseph Menna, later the Mint's Chief Engraver.

Sources