The story behind the coin
For more than two hundred years, American coins had carried presidents, allegories of Liberty, eagles, and the occasional Native American figure. They had never carried a First Lady. In 1999 that changed — and the woman who broke the streak had earned it the hard way.
Dolley Madison was the most consequential hostess in early American politics, and far more than a hostess. She defined the role of First Lady before the title even existed, charming a fractious young capital into something like a society. And in August 1814, when British troops marched on Washington during the War of 1812, she refused to flee the President's House empty-handed. She made sure the full-length portrait of George Washington was saved before the building burned. That act made her a national symbol of grace under fire.
The coin marks the 150th anniversary of her death in 1849. Congress authorized it under Public Law 104-329, part of the United States Commemorative Coin Act of 1996, and the surcharge built into every sale went to the National Trust for Historic Preservation — to endow and restore Montpelier, the Madison family estate in Orange, Virginia.
