When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: sacagawea dollar without a date

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Sacagawea dollar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacagawea_dollar

    However, the Sacagawea dollar did not prove popular with the public, and mintage dropped sharply in the second year of production. Production of Sacagawea dollars continued, from 2007 to 2016, in parallel with the U.S. Presidential dollars. In 2012, mintage numbers were reduced by over 90%, in line with a similar reduction for the even less ...

  3. Should You Spend Your Sacagawea Dollars, Half Dollars or ...

    www.aol.com/spend-sacagawea-dollars-half-dollars...

    2000-P Sacagawea Dollar and statehood quarter mule ($144,000): In coin terminology, a “mule” refers to two different designs on a single piece. In the case of this Sacagawea Dollar, one side ...

  4. Dollar coin (United States) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dollar_coin_(United_States)

    The Sacagawea dollar was authorized by Congress in 1997 because the supply of Anthony dollars in inventory since their last mintage in 1981 was soon expected to be depleted. These coins have a copper core clad in manganese brass. Delays in increasing Sacagawea dollar production led to a final 1999-dated mintage of Susan B. Anthony dollars.

  5. Thomas D. Rogers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_D._Rogers

    Among the coins designed by Rogers is the original reverse of the U.S. dollar coin popularly known as the Sacagawea dollar.It depicts an eagle in flight. Thomas D. Rogers, Sr. (born August 1945) is a former sculptor-engraver with the United States Mint and designer of several U.S. coins, including the 2000–2008 reverse side of the United States Golden dollar coins, or Sacagawea dollars. [1]

  6. $15,000 Sacagawea Dollar? Check Your Coins for Mint Mistakes ...

    www.aol.com/15k-sacagawea-dollar-coin-other...

    “The very first issue of the Sacagawea coins came in Cheerios boxes starting Jan. 1, 2000, but those coins were packaged in such a way that you could not see their reverse,” DeLorey continues.

  7. United States $1 Coin Act of 1997 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_$1_Coin_Act...

    Let's say there were another one billion coins, the Treasury could, in effect, spend—on goods, services, salaries, anything it wants to buy—a billion dollars without having to borrow the money to do it. And, therefore, it would save the interest cost on a billion dollars of debt that is avoided, in the case of a billion more coins.