The story behind the coin
In the late summer of 1814, the War of 1812 was going badly for the United States. British troops had just burned the Capitol and the White House. Next on the list was Baltimore — and the gateway to Baltimore's harbor was a star-shaped brick fort called Fort McHenry.
On the night of September 13, British warships bombarded the fort for some twenty-five hours. A 35-year-old lawyer named Francis Scott Key watched it all from a truce ship in the harbor, where he had gone to negotiate a prisoner's release. He could not tell who was winning in the dark. Then morning came, and the fort's enormous garrison flag — fifteen stars and fifteen stripes — was still there. Key scrawled the lines that became "The Star-Spangled Banner."
That poem became the official national anthem in 1931. And in 2010, Congress voted to mark its 200th anniversary with a coin. The Star-Spangled Banner Commemorative Coin Act — Public Law 111-232, signed by President Obama on August 16, 2010 — authorized a gold $5 piece and this silver dollar, struck in 2012 for a single year only.