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Jamestown 400th Anniversary Commemorative Coins
The Jamestown 400th Anniversary Commemorative Coin Program comprised two commemorative coins – a silver dollar and a $5 gold coin – available in both proof and uncirculated conditions.
The commemorative coins were limited to maximum mintages across all product options of 500,000 for the silver dollar and 100,000 for the $5 gold coin. Both coins were issued only during the one-year period beginning January 1, 2007.
In the spring of 1607, three ships carrying 105 settlers — the Virginia Company of London — made landfall in the New World. The Virginia Company was charged with establishing an English settlement in North America, and its employees were the first permanent English settlers in what would eventually become the United States. Four hundred years later, the United States is honoring the founding of Jamestown with two commemorative coins from the United States Mint.
The continued survival at Jamestown of the crew members aboard the Susan Constant,Godspeed, and Discovery marked a major historical milestone in the exploration of North America. In the legislation authorizing this commemorative coin program, Congress says:
“The Jamestown Settlement brought people from throughout the Atlantic Basin together to form a society that drew upon the strengths and characteristics of English, European, African and Native American cultures. The economic, political, religious and social institutions that developed during the first nine decades of the existence of Jamestown continue to have profound effects on the United States, particularly in English common law and language, cross cultural relationships, manufacturing, and economic structure and status.”
The colony at Jamestown also produced one of the earliest iconic figures of colonial history. Captain John Smith was one of seven council members identified in sealed orders to govern the new colony. Smith led the settlers through the struggles of a harsh winter, the spread of disease, and the often challenging relationships with the Algonquian Indians.
Recipient Organization
Half of the surcharges were to be used to support programs to promote the understanding of the legacies of Jamestown paid to the Jamestown-Yorktown Foundation of the Commonwealth of Virginia.
The other half of surcharges went in equal shares to the Secretary of the Interior, the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities, and the Jamestown-Yorktown Foundation of the Commonwealth of Virginia:
To sustain the ongoing mission of preserving Jamestown.
To enhance national and international educational programs relating to Jamestown, Virginia.
To improve infrastructure and archaeological research activities relating to Jamestown, Virginia.
To conduct other programs to support the commemoration of the 400th anniversary of the settlement of Jamestown, Virginia.