


© Heritage Auctions
½ Dollar Ulysses S. Grant
1922 yearSilver (.900) | 12.5 g | 30.6 mm |
Issuer | United States |
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Period | Federal republic (1776-date) |
Type | Non-circulating coin |
Year | 1922 |
Value | 50 Cents (0.50 USD) |
Currency | Dollar (1785-date) |
Composition | Silver (.900) |
Weight | 12.5 g |
Diameter | 30.6 mm |
Shape | Round |
Technique | Milled |
Orientation | Coin alignment ↑↓ |
Updated | 2024-10-09 |
Numista | N#7944 |
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Rarity index | 50% |
Reverse
The log cabin in Point Pleasant , Ohio, which was where Grant was born.
Script: Latin
Lettering:
IN GOD WE TRUST
E PLURIBUS UNUM
Translation:
In God We Trust
Out of Many, One
Edge
Reeded
Comment
Along with a gold dollar featuring an identical design, the 1922 Grant Memorial Half Dollar was issued for the centennial of the birth of Ulysses S. Grant. He had severed as General of the American Armies during the Civil war and served two terms as the 18th President of the United States.The Ulysses S. Grant Centenary Memorial Association had been formed in the previous year with ambitious plans to celebrate the occasion. The construction of numerous buildings and a highway to memorialize Grant were planned. Authorization was received from Congress for the minting of commemorative gold dollars and half dollars to help finance the projects.
A quantity of 5,000 of the Grant Memorial Half Dollars were struck with the inclusion of a Star on the obverse above “Grant”. The Centenary Memorial Association had requested this quantity of gold dollars struck with the star, but the silver half dollars carrying the star were a surprise. Since the number of 1922 Grant Half Dollars with Star represents only a small portion of the mintage, the coins now represent a rarity amongst early commemorative coins. Originally the “no star” versions were sold for 75 cents, while the “with star” versions were sold for $1.50.
Of the maximum authorized mintage of 250,000 silver half dollars, the mintages net of melting were 4,256 coins “with star” and 67,405 coins with “no star”.
Authorization: Public Law 67-137
Maximum Authorized Mintage: 250,000
Mathew Brady photograph used for the design.