US coinage · denomination

The Half Eagle: America's First Gold Coin

One $5 denomination, struck for 134 years, that holds the rarest and most valuable coin the U.S. Mint has ever made.

In 1795 the brand-new United States struck its first gold coin — not the eagle, not the dollar, but the $5 half eagle. It would run for the next 134 years, pass through six designers, and end up holding the single most valuable coin the U.S. Mint has ever sold.

The story behind the coin

In 1795 the United States was three years into having a Mint and had not yet struck a single gold coin. The Coinage Act of 1792 had authorized three gold denominations — the $10 eagle, the $5 half eagle, and the $2.50 quarter eagle — but a young Treasury with little gold on hand had to start somewhere. It started with the half eagle. On July 31, 1795, the Mint delivered its first 744 gold coins. They were $5 half eagles, and they were the first gold coins the United States ever made.

That "first" is the whole reason the half eagle matters. Everything about early American money was an experiment, and this is the denomination where the experiment in gold began.

It went on to outlast almost everything around it. The half eagle was struck — with gaps — from 1795 all the way to 1929. That is 134 years, six major designs, and seven different mints, from Philadelphia to the gold-rush branch mints of the Deep South and the West. No other U.S. gold coin had a run like it.

And then it produced a true legend. The 1822 half eagle survives in just three known examples — two locked permanently in the Smithsonian, one in private hands. In March 2021 that single private example sold for $8.4 million, making it the most valuable U.S. Mint gold coin ever sold at auction.

The design — and who made it

The half eagle is really six coins wearing one name, and following its designers is following the whole story of American coin art.

Robert Scot got there first. As the Mint's first Chief Engraver, he cut the dies for the 1795 original — a turbaned Liberty in a soft cap on the obverse (the "heads" side) and, on the reverse, a slender eagle perched on a branch, adapted from an ancient Roman gem. Collectors loved the idea and hated the bird; many called it scrawny. Scot answered the critics by redrawing the reverse as a bold heraldic eagle taken from the Great Seal of the United States.

John Reich, a German immigrant engraver, reworked the whole coin in 1807. He turned Liberty to face left in a round cap — the "Capped Bust" and later "Capped Head" types — and put "5 D." on the reverse so the value was finally spelled out. William Kneass then trimmed the design in 1834 for the Classic Head, after Congress cut how much gold each coin contained (more on that below).

Christian Gobrecht gave the half eagle its longest face. His Liberty Head, also called the Coronet type — Liberty in a coronet band reading LIBERTY, a heraldic eagle on the reverse — ran from 1839 to 1908, one of the longest-lived designs in U.S. history. In 1866 the reverse gained the motto IN GOD WE TRUST, added in the wake of the Civil War.

The last word belonged to Bela Lyon Pratt, a Boston sculptor, in 1908 — and it was unlike anything before it. Pratt sank his design into the coin. Where every other U.S. coin carries raised devices, his Native American in a war bonnet and his standing eagle are incuse — recessed below the flat field, like a carving pressed in rather than stamped up. The idea came from Dr. William Sturgis Bigelow, a physician and collector of Japanese and Egyptian art, who pitched it to President Theodore Roosevelt over lunch in 1908. Roosevelt, already on a crusade to beautify American coinage, said yes. The result is the only sunken-relief design the U.S. Mint ever put into circulation.

Key facts

Denomination
$5 (half eagle)
Years struck
1795–1929 (circulating); modern $5 gold commemoratives 1986–present
First U.S. gold coin
Yes — first delivery July 31, 1795
Designers
Robert Scot, John Reich, William Kneass, Christian Gobrecht, Bela Lyon Pratt
Composition (1795–1834)
.9167 gold, balance silver and copper
Composition (1837 onward)
.900 gold, .100 copper
Indian Head specs
8.359 g, 21.6 mm, .900 gold
Mints
Philadelphia, Charlotte, Dahlonega, New Orleans, San Francisco, Carson City, Denver
Great rarity
1822 — 3 known; finest sold for $8.4 million (2021)
Famous branch-mint rarity
1854-S — 268 struck, 4 known

Collecting it: key dates, varieties, and why high grades are scarce

The half eagle rewards collectors at every level, but its peaks are the stuff of legend.

The 1822 is the summit. Three are known; two sit in the Smithsonian and never move. The one example a collector can actually own set the all-time U.S. Mint gold record at $8.4 million in 2021 — graded only About Uncirculated, because even the finest survivor shows wear.

The 1854-S is the other great prize. The new San Francisco Mint struck just 268 of them in 1854, none were saved at the time, and only four are known today — one of them confirmed by NGC as recently as 2018. One brought $1.92 million in 2020. One was a gift to the Smithsonian; another famously passed through the collection of King Farouk of Egypt.

A whole branch of half-eagle collecting lives in the Southern gold-rush mints. Charlotte (mint mark C) and Dahlonega (mint mark D) opened in 1838 to coin the gold pulled from Appalachian streams, and they struck half eagles only in tiny numbers before the Civil War shut them for good. A mint mark is the small letter showing where a coin was made; on these Southern issues it is the difference between a common date and a regional treasure. Carson City (CC) and New Orleans (O) issues carry the same romance — the 1909-O is the key date of the entire Indian Head series, struck in New Orleans's final year.

Two structural facts shape the market. First, almost all of these coins were gold money that actually circulated, so high grades are scarce by nature — a coin that spent years in commerce shows it. Second, the 1933 Gold Recall pulled enormous quantities of gold coin out of private hands to be melted, thinning the survivors for nearly every date. What's left in pristine condition is, for most issues, a small fraction of what was struck.

The Indian Head type adds its own wrinkle. Pratt's incuse design has no raised rim to protect it, so wear and contact marks land directly on the design. Collectors and dealers argued for years that the recessed surfaces would "trap dirt and germs" and be easy to counterfeit — criticism the coin survived but never fully shook. Pratt himself was bitter that Chief Engraver Charles Barber altered his work, writing that Barber had changed it "from a thing that I was proud of to one I am ashamed."

Questions collectors ask

What is a half eagle?

A half eagle is a United States $5 gold coin. The name comes from the $10 gold 'eagle' — the half eagle is half that value. It was first struck in 1795 and was the first gold coin the U.S. ever made.

Why is the 1822 half eagle so valuable?

Only three are known to exist, and two of those are permanently held by the Smithsonian. That leaves a single example a collector can own. In 2021 it sold for $8.4 million — the highest price ever paid for a U.S. Mint gold coin at auction.

Who designed the half eagle?

Six designs over 134 years, by five engravers and sculptors: Robert Scot cut the 1795 original; John Reich reworked it in 1807; William Kneass adapted it in 1834; Christian Gobrecht created the long-running Liberty Head in 1839; and Bela Lyon Pratt designed the sunken-relief Indian Head in 1908.

Why is the Indian Head half eagle's design sunken instead of raised?

It is the only U.S. circulating coin with an incuse design — carved below the surface rather than raised above it. The idea came from Dr. William Sturgis Bigelow and was approved by President Theodore Roosevelt in 1908. Critics complained it would trap dirt and be easy to fake, but it stayed in production.

When did the U.S. stop making half eagles?

The last circulating half eagles were struck in 1929. Gold coinage for circulation ended in the early 1930s. The $5 denomination returned only in 1986 as modern gold commemoratives, starting with the Statue of Liberty centennial coin.

What does the C or D mint mark mean on a half eagle?

C is Charlotte, North Carolina; D (before 1861) is Dahlonega, Georgia. Both were Southern branch mints that opened in 1838 to coin local gold-rush gold. Their half eagles were made in small numbers and are prized today. (After 1906, D means Denver.)

Sources

Half Eagle ($5 Gold Coin): History, Designs & Key Dates | colcur