The story behind the coin
The bald eagle has been the emblem of the United States since 1782. By the middle of the 20th century, it was nearly gone from the country it represents.
DDT — a pesticide sprayed across American farmland — washed into rivers, built up in fish, and ended up in the eagles that ate them. It didn't kill the birds outright. It thinned their eggshells until they cracked under the weight of a nesting parent. Fewer chicks hatched. The population collapsed. By the early 1960s, only a few hundred nesting pairs remained in the lower 48 states.
Then the country changed course. DDT was banned in 1972. In 1973, Congress passed the Endangered Species Act, and the bald eagle became one of its first listed species. Protection, breeding programs, and cleaner water did the rest. Over three decades the eagle clawed its way back, and in 2007 it was removed from the endangered list entirely.
This coin is the victory lap. Congress authorized it through Public Law 108-486 — the American Bald Eagle Recovery and National Emblem Commemorative Coin Act — to mark both the recovery itself and the 35th anniversary of that 1973 law. The half dollar was the most affordable of three coins issued together in 2008: a clad half dollar, a silver dollar, and a five-dollar gold piece.