United States Mint Unveils Designs of New Circulating Presidential $1 Coins
Washington, DC — United States Mint Director Edmund C. Moy;
Louise Roseman, Director of Reserve Bank Operations and Payments Systems at the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve; and other Federal officials provided a first glimpse of a new series of circulating
Presidential $1 Coins at a design unveiling ceremony held today at the Smithsonian Institution’s National
Portrait Gallery. The $1 coins are being introduced as a result of the Presidential Coin Act of 2005,
which requires the United States Mint to mint the dollar coins commemorating the service of former United
States Presidents in the order in which they served.
Like the United States Mint’s successful 50 State Quarters® Program on which it was modeled, the
Presidential $1 Coin Program features a systematically rotating design. The first four $1 coins will
commemorate George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson and James Madison.
"The new Presidential $1 Coins are an educational and fun way to learn about former Presidents, "
said Director Moy. "Our research indicates that, like the 50 State Quarters coins, the Presidential
$1 Coins will be popular with millions of Americans."
According to a study commissioned by the United States Mint, about half of all Americans are interested in
collecting the Presidential $1 Coins – but their appeal does not end with collecting.
"Congress recognized that the 50 State Quarters Program showed how a systematically changing design
can spark public interest in a coin and we’re hoping to build on that success," Director Moy said.
Traditional Subjects, Unique Design
The designs of the coins are bold and dramatic, with traditional inscriptions moved to the edge to allow
for larger images of the Presidents. These include "E Pluribus Unum" and "In God We Trust,"
the year of minting or issuance, and the mint mark, making these coins unique among today’s U.S. circulating coins.
The new Presidential $1 Coins are identical in color and size to the Sacagawea Golden Dollar Coins, and
have the same distinctive rim and tactile features to assist the visually impaired. Additionally, the
new $1 coins carry the same electromagnetic signature as both the Sacagawea Golden Dollar coin and the
Susan B. Anthony dollar coin, making them readily acceptable in vending machines that currently accept
dollar coins.
The face of each coin will feature an image of a former President and the years of his term of office.
The reverse of the coin shows an image of the Statue of Liberty and the inscriptions "The United States
of America" and "$1."
For downloadable images of the new Presidential $1 Coins,
please click here.
Distributed through Banks and Other Financial Institutions
The United States Mint and the Federal Reserve System are working in partnership to make it easy for
businesses and members of the general public to obtain the new coins as they are released. The Presidential
$1 Coins will be shipped to banks and other financial institutions in rolls, unmixed with other dollar coins.
For each new design, banks may order and store the coins up to two weeks prior to the introduction so they
will have supplies on hand on the release date. The coins will be available in unmixed rolls for four weeks
after the introduction of each design. When each new Presidential $1 Coin is released, the special ordering
process begins again.
Presidential Dollar Coin Release Schedule
Each President will be honored with a single $1 coin, regardless of the number of consecutive terms he served.
Grover Cleveland, the only United States President to serve non-consecutive terms, will be honored on two coins.
No living former or current President can be honored on a coin.
|
Year |
President |
Years Served |
|
|
|
2007
|
1 George Washington
|
1789-1797
|
|
2 John Adams
|
1797-1801
|
|
3 Thomas Jefferson
|
1801-1809
|
|
4 James Madison
|
1809-1817
|
|
|
|
2008
|
5 James Monroe
|
1817-1825
|
|
6 John Quincy Adams
|
1825-1829
|
|
7 Andrew Jackson
|
1829-1837
|
|
8 Martin Van Buren
|
1837-1841
|
|
|
|
2009
|
9 William Henry Harrison
|
1841
|
|
10 John Tyler
|
1841-1845
|
|
11 James K. Polk
|
1845-1849
|
|
12 Zachary Taylor
|
1849-1850
|
|
|
|
2010
|
13 Millard Fillmore
|
1850-1853
|
|
14 Franklin Pierce
|
1853-1857
|
|
15 James Buchanan
|
1857-1861
|
|
16 Abraham Lincoln
|
1861-1865
|
|
|
|
2011
|
17 Andrew Johnson
|
1865-1869
|
|
18 Ulysses S. Grant
|
1869-1877
|
|
19 Rutherford B. Hayes
|
1877-1881
|
|
20 James A. Garfield
|
1893-1897
|
|
|
|
2012
|
21 Chester A. Arthur
|
1881-1885
|
|
22 Grover Cleveland
|
1885-1889
|
|
23 Benjamin Harrison
|
1889-1893
|
|
24 Grover Cleveland
|
1893-1897
|
|
|
|
2013
|
25 William McKinley
|
1897-1901
|
|
26 Theodore Roosevelt
|
1901-1909
|
|
27 William H. Taft
|
1909-1913
|
|
28 Woodrow Wilson
|
1913-1921
|
|
|
|
2014
|
29 Warren Harding
|
1921-1923
|
|
30 Calvin Coolidge
|
1923-1929
|
|
31 Herbert Hoover
|
1929-1933
|
|
32 Franklin Delano Roosevelt
|
1933-1945
|
|
|
|
2015
|
33 Harry S Truman
|
1945-1953
|
|
34 Dwight David Eisenhower
|
1953-1961
|
|
35 John F. Kennedy
|
1961-1963
|
|
36 Lyndon B. Johnson
|
1963-1969
|
|
|
|
2016
|
37 Richard M. Nixon
|
1969-1974
|