The story behind the coin
By the 1990s, America's Civil War battlefields were vanishing under shopping malls and subdivisions. Gettysburg, Antietam, Manassas — the places where the country nearly tore itself apart were being paved over. A century after the war, the fight had become one to save the land itself.
Congress answered with money, in the way it often does for a cause: a coin. The Civil War Battlefields Commemorative Coin Act of 1992 (Public Law 102-379) was signed by President George H. W. Bush on October 5, 1992. It authorized a three-coin program — a copper-nickel half dollar, this 90% silver dollar, and a $5 gold piece — to mark the 100th anniversary of the preservation effort, not the war.
Here's the clever part. Every coin carried a surcharge — an extra charge baked into the price, above the coin's metal and minting cost. The dollar added $7, and that surcharge was earmarked for a foundation set up to buy and protect endangered battlefield land. Buy the coin, save the ground. The coins went on sale March 31, 1995.
