The story behind the coin
On December 1, 1794, the brand-new United States Mint struck around 5,300 silver coins and called them half dollars. They were crude — uneven, weakly struck, made on equipment that could barely handle a coin that size. But they mattered enormously. A young country printing its own money was making a promise: this is real, this is ours, this is worth something. The half dollar was the largest silver coin the Mint could reliably produce, so for the first decades of the republic it was big money.
For most of the 1800s, the half dollar quietly did the heavy lifting of American commerce. It was the workhorse silver coin — banks moved them by the bag, and they backed paper currency in vaults across the country. While the silver dollar came and went and got hoarded and melted, the half dollar kept circulating. If you wanted to understand the money in an ordinary American's pocket between the War of 1812 and the Gilded Age, you looked at the half.
Then came 1964, and the strangest chapter of all. President John F. Kennedy had been assassinated that November. Within weeks, Congress authorized a half dollar bearing his portrait. When it appeared in early 1964, people didn't spend it — they kept it. The coin meant to honor a fallen president was treated like a keepsake, and it nearly vanished from circulation the moment it arrived. The half dollar has never really come back. Today it's still made, but mostly for collectors; you almost never get one in change. The coin that once carried the nation's everyday silver became a memorial nobody wanted to let go of.