The Long Island Tercentenary half dollar was a commemorative half dollar struck by the United States Bureau of the Mint in 1936. The obverse depicts a male Dutch settler and an Algonquian tribesman, and the reverse shows a Dutch sailing ship. It was designed by Howard Weinman, the son of Mercury dime designer Adolph A. Weinman.
About Long Island Tercentenary half dollar in brief

A minimum of 5,000 and a maximum of 100,000 were issued to be issued to the public, regardless of when the coin was coined. A report recommending the bill pass once amended required that they only be issued for a year and bear the date of authorization of when they were coined. Other issues had been entirely bought up by single dealers, and some low-mintage varieties of commemorative varieties of coins were selling at high prices. The report recommended these provisions appear in future commemorative bills, and they were considered in the last series of bills being considered on March 11, 1936 and passed on March 26, 1936; the bill was amended once again and passed the Senate without debate and passed in March 1937. In 1936, commemorative medals were not sold by the government—Congress, in authorizing legislation, usually designated an organization which had the exclusive right to purchase them at face value and tend them to thepublic at a premium. That committee was formed to organize anniversary celebrations to take place on Long Island. The political influence of the members of the Ter centenary Committee was sufficient to get a bill into Congress. The bill called for a minimum of100,000 half dollars to be struck. That committee reported back on February 28, 1936,. through Andrew Somers of New Yorkers, recommending passage.
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