US coin · series

The American Legion 100th Anniversary Half Dollar

A 2019 coin for a veterans' group that was founded in Paris, not Washington.

In 2019 the U.S. Mint struck a half dollar for an organization that began the way many great American things do — improbably, far from home. The American Legion was dreamed up by World War I soldiers in Paris in 1919. A century later, two children on a coin recite the Pledge of Allegiance to honor them.

The story behind the coin

The American Legion did not start in a marble building in Washington. It started in Paris, in March 1919, among soldiers who had just won a war and weren't sure what came next.

The American Expeditionary Forces — the U.S. troops who fought in World War I — were stuck in France waiting to go home. Morale was thin. So a group of officers, with Lieutenant Colonel Theodore Roosevelt Jr. among them, proposed a veterans' organization. About a thousand officers and enlisted men gathered for what became known as the Paris Caucus on March 15–17, 1919. They adopted a name — The American Legion — and a temporary constitution. By that September, Congress had granted them a national charter.

What grew from that meeting became one of the largest veterans' groups in the country. For its 100th anniversary, Congress decided it deserved a coin. The American Legion 100th Anniversary Commemorative Coin Act became law on October 6, 2017 (Public Law 115-65), authorizing a three-coin program — a $5 gold piece, a silver dollar, and this clad half dollar — all dated 2019.

Here's the part collectors love: this is a commemorative, not a circulating coin. It was never meant for your pocket. The Mint made it to be bought, kept, and to raise money — and then it stopped. By law, the coins could be issued for one year only. When 2019 ended, the dies went quiet for good.

What the coin shows

The obverse — the heads side — skips the usual portrait of a statesman. Instead it shows two small children, a boy and a girl, hands over their hearts, reciting the Pledge of Allegiance. The girl wears a cap several sizes too big for her: her grandfather's old American Legion garrison cap. It's a quiet way of saying the Legion's work is about the next generation, not just the last war.

The reverse — the tails side — completes the thought. An American flag flies high on its pole, the Legion's emblem above it, and the words of the Pledge carry over from the front. The standard legends are there too: "E PLURIBUS UNUM" and "HALF DOLLAR."

The artists split the work the way the modern Mint usually does — one person draws it, another carves it. The obverse was designed by Richard Masters, an artist in the Mint's Artistic Infusion Program (a roster of outside artists the Mint commissions), and sculpted into the working model by Mint engraver Phebe Hemphill. The reverse was both designed and sculpted by Joseph Menna, who would later become the Mint's Chief Engraver. (Some price-guide listings swap the "designer" and "sculptor" labels; the credits here follow the Mint's own attribution.)

Key facts

Year struck
2019 (one-year program)
Denomination
Half dollar (50¢ face value)
Composition
Copper-nickel clad (outer layers ~75% copper / 25% nickel over a pure-copper core)
Weight
11.34 g
Diameter
30.61 mm
Obverse
Designed by Richard Masters; sculpted by Phebe Hemphill
Reverse
Designed and sculpted by Joseph Menna
Mint marks
D — Denver (uncirculated); S — San Francisco (proof)
Maximum authorized mintage
750,000
Reported sales
Roughly 11,400 uncirculated (2019-D) and 26,000–27,000 proof (2019-S) — far below the cap
Surcharge
$5 per coin, paid to The American Legion
Authorizing law
Public Law 115-65 (Oct. 6, 2017)

Collecting it

The headline number for collectors is the gap between what was allowed and what was sold. Congress let the Mint make up to 750,000 of these half dollars. Buyers took only a small fraction of that — on the order of 11,000 uncirculated coins and roughly 26,000 to 27,000 proofs, by the reported sales figures. (Sources differ by a few hundred, and the Mint's audited final totals are the last word; treat these as the working numbers.)

That low real mintage is the whole story. A 750,000 cap can make a coin sound common; the actual sales make it scarce. There is no rare date and no famous variety to chase here — the program ran one year, two facilities, two finishes. What you're collecting is the finish: the Denver-struck uncirculated coin (a satin-like business strike) and the San Francisco proof (the mirror-field, frosted-device version made for collectors).

Because these were sold straight from the Mint and tucked away, most survive in top grades. The premium examples are the ones graders certify as flawless — MS70 for the uncirculated coin, PR70 for the proof — where "70" is the top of the 70-point Sheldon scale and means no flaws visible under standard magnification. Those perfect coins, especially with early-release labels, carry the meaningful premiums in this series. A coin that merely "exists" in this program is affordable; a coin that's perfect is where the chase lives.

Questions collectors ask

Is the 2019 American Legion half dollar rare?

Not by its authorized cap of 750,000 — but by what was actually sold, yes. Reported sales were only around 11,400 uncirculated (2019-D) coins and roughly 26,000–27,000 proofs (2019-S), a small fraction of the limit. Low real mintage, not a rare date, is what gives the series its scarcity.

Why was this coin made?

To mark the 100th anniversary of the American Legion, founded by U.S. World War I veterans at the Paris Caucus in March 1919. Congress authorized a three-coin commemorative program — gold, silver, and this clad half dollar — under Public Law 115-65 in 2017, all dated 2019.

Who designed the half dollar?

The obverse — two children reciting the Pledge, the girl in her grandfather's Legion cap — was designed by Artistic Infusion Program artist Richard Masters and sculpted by Mint engraver Phebe Hemphill. The reverse, an American flag and the Legion emblem, was designed and sculpted by Joseph Menna.

What does the $5 surcharge mean?

Commemorative coins carry a built-in surcharge on top of the coin's cost. For this half dollar it was $5 per coin, paid by law to The American Legion to support its programs for veterans and service members. The surcharge is why these coins existed — they were a fundraiser, not pocket change.

What's the difference between the 2019-D and 2019-S coins?

It's the finish and the mint. The 2019-D was struck in Denver as an uncirculated coin (a satin business strike). The 2019-S was struck in San Francisco as a proof — the polished-field, frosted-device version made specifically for collectors.

Sources