US coin · series

The first half dollar America ever struck in gold

Fifty years after Dallas, Kennedy's face came back — this time in three-quarters of an ounce of pure gold.

In 2014 the U.S. Mint did something it had never done in two centuries of coining: it struck a half dollar in gold. The face value still read fifty cents. The metal inside was worth more than a thousand dollars. Collectors lined up around the block for it.

The story behind the coin

In November 1963, a president was killed and a country needed something to hold. Within days of the assassination, the Mint decided the next half dollar would carry John F. Kennedy's face. Chief Engraver Gilroy Roberts and his assistant Frank Gasparro reworked portraits they had already cut for a Kennedy medal, and by March 1964 the coin was in people's hands.

It barely circulated. The public did not spend the 1964 Kennedy half — they kept it. The Mint struck hundreds of millions of them, and they vanished into drawers, jewelry boxes, and shoeboxes almost as fast as they came out. A coin meant for commerce became a keepsake on day one.

Fifty years later, the Mint marked that anniversary with a coin it had never made before. Not silver, not the copper-nickel that had carried the design since 1971 — gold. Three-quarters of an ounce of it, struck at the West Point Mint and stamped with a small "W" (the mint mark — the tiny letter that says which Mint struck the coin). It was the first gold half dollar in the history of the United States.

What it depicts — and the legal fight over it

The two faces are the originals from 1964, brought back the way their makers first imagined them. The obverse — the heads side — is Gilroy Roberts' left-facing portrait of Kennedy, adapted from the bust he had cut for Kennedy's inaugural medal. The reverse — the tails side — is Frank Gasparro's heraldic eagle, a version of the Presidential Seal.

What makes the gold coin special is the relief — how far the design rises off the surface. The 2014 issue was struck in high relief, letting the portrait stand up off the field the way the engravers had wanted in 1964, before the demands of mass production flattened it down. To hold it is to see the design closer to its first sketch than any circulating Kennedy half ever was. Both faces also carry the dual date "1964–2014," the anniversary spelled out in the coin itself.

There was a quieter drama, too. Some collectors asked a sharp question: was a gold half dollar even legal? The Mint pointed to its standing authority over bullion and proof gold coinage — citing 31 U.S.C. § 5112(i)(4)(C), the section that lets the Treasury Secretary set the specifications for gold coin programs. The coin shipped. The debate is a reminder that even a celebration coin has to answer to a statute.

Key facts

Year struck
2014 (dual-dated 1964–2014)
Denomination
Half dollar (50 cents face value)
Composition
.9999 fine gold (24-karat)
Weight
3/4 troy ounce
Diameter
30.61 mm
Mint / mint mark
West Point — 'W'
Finish
Proof, high relief
Obverse designer
Gilroy Roberts (1964 Kennedy portrait)
Reverse designer
Frank Gasparro (Presidential Seal eagle)
Mintage
73,772 (cap set at 75,000)
First sold
August 5, 2014, at the ANA convention, Rosemont, Illinois
Notable
First half dollar ever struck in gold by the U.S. Mint

Collecting it

This is a one-year, one-mint coin: 2014, West Point, gold, and nothing else. That makes the collecting story unusually clean. There are no rare dates to chase within the issue — there is only this coin, in the grade you can find it.

The supply is fixed and small. The Mint originally left the mintage open, then capped it at 75,000 on December 5, 2014, when sales had reached about 67,640. The final count came in at 73,772 — one of the lowest mintages in the entire Kennedy half dollar series. When it went on sale on August 5, 2014, at the American Numismatic Association's convention in Rosemont, Illinois, buyers waited in long lines and an early secondary market sprang up almost immediately.

Because it sold as a proof — a proof being a specially struck coin made from polished dies for collectors, with mirror fields and frosted devices — condition is the whole game here. Grades cluster near the top, so the coins that command the most are the flawless ones (PR70 / PF70) and, among those, the first-strike and first-day-of-issue examples that the grading services flag. Two things move the price: how perfectly it was struck and preserved, and the price of gold itself, since every coin holds three-quarters of an ounce of it. Its launch price floated with the gold market — it was offered around the low-to-mid $1,200s — so think of the metal as a floor under the collectible.

Questions collectors ask

Is the 2014 gold Kennedy half dollar real gold?

Yes. It is struck in .9999 fine gold — 24-karat, 99.99% pure — and contains three-quarters of a troy ounce of it. Despite the 50-cent face value stamped on the coin, the gold alone is worth well over a thousand dollars.

Why does it say 1964–2014?

It is a dual date marking the 50th anniversary of the Kennedy half dollar. The original coin was released in 1964, months after President Kennedy's assassination; this gold issue celebrated that design's golden anniversary in 2014.

Who designed it?

The portrait of Kennedy is by Gilroy Roberts, the Mint's chief engraver in 1964, adapted from a Kennedy medal. The eagle on the back is by Frank Gasparro, based on the Presidential Seal. The 2014 coin reuses their 1964 designs, struck in high relief.

How many were made, and is it rare?

Just 73,772 were struck — among the lowest mintages of any Kennedy half dollar. The Mint capped production at 75,000. It is genuinely scarce within the series, though it was sold to collectors rather than released into circulation.

What makes one worth more than another?

Two things: grade and gold. Top-grade certified examples (PF70) — especially first-strike or first-day-of-issue coins — bring the most. Beneath any premium sits the value of three-quarters of an ounce of gold, which moves with the metal market.

Was it ever meant to spend?

No. Like the 1964 original — which the public hoarded instead of spending — this was a collector coin from the start. The 50-cent face value is symbolic; no one is buying coffee with a $1,200 gold coin.

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