US coin · series

The 2011 United States Army Commemorative Silver Dollar

A man and a woman, standing back to back over a globe — the modern Army on a coin built to fund its first national museum.

In 2011, the U.S. Mint put two soldiers back to back on a silver dollar — one man, one woman, a globe behind them — to mark an Army that turns out to be older than the country it serves. The proof sold well. The uncirculated version barely sold at all, and that quiet failure is exactly what collectors chase now.

The story behind the coin

The United States Army is older than the United States. The Continental Congress voted the Continental Army into being on June 14, 1775 — more than a year before the Declaration of Independence. So when Congress decided the Army deserved its own coin, it was honoring an institution that predates the flag, the Constitution, and the dollar itself.

That decision became law on December 1, 2008, when President George W. Bush signed the United States Army Commemorative Coin Act (Public Law 110-450). It authorized a three-coin set for 2011: a $5 gold piece, a half dollar in ordinary clad metal, and this — a 90% silver dollar.

The coins had a job beyond celebration. A surcharge built into every sale — $10 on each silver dollar — was sent to the Army Historical Foundation to help build the National Museum of the United States Army at Fort Belvoir, Virginia. In other words, collectors who bought this coin were quietly paying to give the Army its first national museum. (A commemorative coin doesn't circulate; it's sold by the Mint to collectors at a premium, and here that premium did real work.)

What the coin shows

The three 2011 Army coins were split by theme. The gold $5 took "war." The clad half dollar took "peace." This silver dollar took the present tense — "Modern Service" — and it shows.

The obverse — the heads side — breaks from the usual single profile. Designer Richard Masters placed a male and a female soldier back to back, with a globe rising behind them. The message is plain once you see it: today's Army is two genders and the whole world. It carries only LIBERTY, IN GOD WE TRUST, and the date 2011. Mint sculptor Michael Gaudioso cut the design into the working model — the die that strikes the coin.

The reverse — designed by Susan Gamble and sculpted by Don Everhart, one of the Mint's most prolific artists — is quieter and heavier with meaning. At its center sits the Great Seal of the United States, the same eagle soldiers wear on their uniforms. Ringing it, separated by stars, are the seven core values every soldier is taught to recite: LOYALTY, DUTY, RESPECT, SELFLESS SERVICE, HONOR, INTEGRITY, and PERSONAL COURAGE. It is, in effect, the Army's creed turned into a coin.

Key facts

Year struck
2011
Denomination
Silver dollar ($1, non-circulating commemorative)
Honors
Founding of the U.S. Army (1775) and the modern soldier
Authorizing law
Public Law 110-450 (signed Dec 1, 2008)
Obverse designer
Richard Masters (sculptor: Michael Gaudioso)
Reverse designer
Susan Gamble (sculptor: Don Everhart)
Composition
90% silver, 10% copper (0.7734 oz silver)
Weight / diameter
26.73 g / 38.1 mm (1.5 in)
Proof — 2011-P
119,829 struck (Philadelphia)
Uncirculated — 2011-S
43,512 struck (San Francisco)
Authorized maximum
500,000 silver dollars
Surcharge
$10 per coin to the Army Historical Foundation

Collecting the 2011 Army silver dollar

Modern commemoratives have a pattern, and this coin is a textbook case of it: the version that sounds fancier is the common one, and the plain one is scarce.

The Mint struck the coin two ways. The proof — a mirror-finish coin made for collectors, with frosted devices against a polished field — carries a P mint mark for Philadelphia, and 119,829 of them were made. The uncirculated coin — a normal business-style finish, the kind that would circulate if it ever did — carries an S for San Francisco. Only 43,512 of those sold before the Mint closed the books in December 2011.

That gap is the whole game. The shiny proof is what most buyers wanted, so there are nearly three times as many. The everyday-looking uncirculated coin is the genuinely scarce one, and it's the figure a collector watches. Far below the 500,000 the law allowed, the program never came close to selling out — which is common for modern commems and is precisely why the low-mintage variant carries the premium it does.

Because it's 90% silver, the coin also has a floor under it: roughly three-quarters of an ounce of silver, so its melt value rises and falls with the metal. The collector value sits on top of that floor — and for this issue, the climb above melt belongs to the 2011-S uncirculated coin in the highest grades.

Questions collectors ask

How many 2011 Army silver dollars were made?

Two versions: 119,829 proof coins (2011-P, Philadelphia) and 43,512 uncirculated coins (2011-S, San Francisco). The law allowed up to 500,000, so the program sold well under its limit.

Which 2011 Army silver dollar is rarer — proof or uncirculated?

The uncirculated 2011-S is much scarcer, with 43,512 struck versus 119,829 proofs. As with most modern commemoratives, the plainer uncirculated finish sold far fewer, which is why it carries the premium.

What does the back-to-back man and woman on the obverse mean?

It represents the modern, worldwide U.S. Army — both genders, deployed across the globe, which is why a globe sits behind them. The 2011 silver dollar's theme was 'Modern Service.'

What are the seven words around the eagle on the reverse?

They are the Army's seven core values: Loyalty, Duty, Respect, Selfless Service, Honor, Integrity, and Personal Courage, separated by stars around the Great Seal of the United States.

Is the 2011 Army silver dollar real silver?

Yes. It's struck in 90% silver and 10% copper and contains about 0.7734 troy ounces of silver, giving it a metal value beneath whatever a collector pays for the coin itself.

What was the coin sold for, and where did the money go?

The Mint launched it on January 31, 2011 at $49.95 (uncirculated) and $54.95 (proof). A $10 surcharge from every silver dollar went to the Army Historical Foundation toward the National Museum of the United States Army.

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