US coin · series

The 2021 National Law Enforcement Memorial & Museum Silver Dollar

A coin made to pay for a museum — and one almost nobody bought.

Congress can order a coin into existence, but it can't make people buy it. In 2021 the U.S. Mint struck a silver dollar for a museum about American policing. It was allowed to make 400,000. It sold about a tenth of that.

The story behind the coin

In 2021 the U.S. Mint released a silver dollar with a job to do: raise money for a building most Americans have never seen.

That building is the National Law Enforcement Museum in Washington, D.C. — a roughly $103 million, mostly-underground hall in Judiciary Square that opened on October 13, 2018. From the street you'd barely notice it; two glass pavilions are about all that show above ground. Privately funded, it was built to tell the history of American policing and to study the relationship between officers and the public.

That's where this coin comes in. Modern U.S. commemoratives are a fundraising tool dressed up as money. Congress authorizes a coin for a cause, the Mint sells it for more than its metal is worth, and a fixed surcharge — a built-in donation baked into the price — flows to the cause. The law behind this one was signed on December 20, 2019, folded into a year-end spending package (H.R. 1865). It set a surcharge of $10 on every silver dollar sold, earmarked for the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund, the nonprofit that runs the museum.

Here's the catch the law couldn't legislate away: a commemorative only raises money if people buy it. This one didn't. The Mint was authorized to strike up to 400,000 silver dollars. By late August 2021 it had sold roughly 32,500 — about eight cents of every authorized dollar. That makes it one of the great quiet underperformers of the modern commemorative era, and that scarcity-by-accident is a big part of why a collector looks at it today.

What the coin shows

The coin trades the usual eagles and allegory for something more human.

The obverse — the heads side — shows a police officer kneeling beside a small child. The child sits on a basketball, reading a book. It's a deliberately gentle scene: not an arrest, not a chase, but an officer at a kid's eye level. The inscriptions read SERVE & PROTECT, LIBERTY, IN GOD WE TRUST, and the date 2021. It was designed by Frank Morris of the Mint's Artistic Infusion Program — the pool of outside artists the Mint commissions for fresh ideas — and sculpted by Mint medallic artist Phebe Hemphill.

The reverse — the tails side — carries the same theme of trust: a handshake between a uniformed officer and a member of the public, the two hands clasped at the center of the coin. Around it run UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, E PLURIBUS UNUM ("out of many, one"), and the denomination, ONE DOLLAR. The reverse was designed by Ronald D. Sanders and sculpted by John P. McGraw.

Both choices say something. There's no badge-and-gun bravado here. The whole coin is an argument about community — the museum's stated mission turned into metal.

Key facts

Year struck
2021 (one-year program)
Denomination
Silver dollar ($1 face)
Composition
99.9% silver
Weight
26.730 g
Diameter
1.500 in (38.1 mm)
Mint
Philadelphia (P mint mark)
Obverse
Officer kneeling beside a reading child — Frank Morris (design), Phebe Hemphill (sculpt)
Reverse
Officer-and-citizen handshake — Ronald D. Sanders (design), John P. McGraw (sculpt)
Maximum authorized
400,000 silver dollars
Reported sales (to late Aug 2021)
~32,569 (24,697 proof; 7,872 uncirculated)
Surcharge
$10 per coin to the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund
Authorizing law
Signed Dec 20, 2019 (H.R. 1865)

Collecting it

This is a modern commemorative, so the rules are different from a 19th-century rarity. The Mint sold these brand-new in two finishes: a proof — struck on polished dies for mirror fields and frosted devices, made for collectors — and an uncirculated (the Mint calls it "burnished") finish with a softer, matte-bright look. Both wear the P mint mark for Philadelphia.

What makes this one interesting isn't age — it's the sales flop. Of the two finishes, the uncirculated dollar is the scarcer: roughly 7,900 sold against nearly 24,700 proofs. For a U.S. silver dollar, sub-10,000 is a genuinely small number, and it happened in plain sight in 2021. The coin's value sits in two places at once: the silver it contains (just under three-quarters of a troy ounce) sets a hard floor, and the low sales give the top grades a real population scarcity above that floor.

Because these were sold as collector products, most survive in pristine shape — so condition is graded finely. The premium ones are the flawless examples (graded 70, the top of the scale) and the early-release examples certified by the grading services. There are no rare die varieties to chase here; the story is finish and grade, not a hunt across mint marks.

Questions collectors ask

How many 2021 National Law Enforcement silver dollars were made?

Far fewer than allowed. The U.S. Mint could legally strike up to 400,000, but reported sales by late August 2021 were only about 32,569 — roughly 24,700 proof and 7,900 uncirculated coins. The low take-up is the coin's defining trait.

What is the coin made of?

99.9% silver. It weighs 26.730 grams and measures 1.500 inches across — the standard modern U.S. commemorative dollar format. It contains just under three-quarters of a troy ounce of pure silver, which sets a baseline value.

Who designed it?

The obverse — the kneeling officer and reading child — was designed by Frank Morris and sculpted by Phebe Hemphill. The reverse handshake was designed by Ronald D. Sanders and sculpted by John P. McGraw.

What does the coin commemorate, and where did the money go?

It honors American law enforcement and helped fund the National Law Enforcement Museum in Washington, D.C., which opened in 2018. A $10 surcharge on each silver dollar was earmarked for the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund, the nonprofit that runs the museum.

Was this coin struck in years other than 2021?

No. It was a one-year commemorative program. The authorizing law required sales to end by December 31, 2021, so the coin carries only the 2021 date.

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