The story behind the coin
This coin is a survivor of the most overcrowded commemorative program the US Mint has ever run.
When Atlanta won the 1996 Summer Olympics, Congress authorized a sprawling coin program to help pay for the Games. The Doug Barnard, Jr.—1996 Atlanta Centennial Olympic Games Commemorative Coin Act (Public Law 102-390, signed October 6, 1992) cleared the way for sixteen different coins — four gold $5 pieces, eight silver dollars, and several clad half dollars — released across 1995 and 1996. Each carried a surcharge: an extra fee added to the price that went not to the Mint but to a designated cause. For the silver dollars it was $10 per coin, routed to the Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games and the US Olympic movement.
That was a lot of coins to ask collectors to buy, and the market said so. Spread over two years, sixteen designs, the program overwhelmed buyers — and sales fell far short of what the Mint hoped. The Paralympic dollar paid the price. Its uncirculated coin, struck in Denver, found only 14,497 buyers — a tiny number, and one of the smallest mintages of any US silver dollar of the modern commemorative era.
Here is the irony. The coin honors the 1996 Atlanta Paralympic Games, the first Paralympics ever broadcast on US television — a milestone moment for athletes who had spent decades fighting for visibility. A coin meant to celebrate people the world had overlooked was, in turn, overlooked by collectors. That neglect is exactly why it matters today.