The Peace dollar is a United States dollar coin minted from 1921 to 1928, and again in 1934 and 1935. Designed by Anthony de Francisci, the coin was the result of a competition to find designs emblematic of peace. Its obverse represents the head and neck of the Goddess of Liberty in profile, and the reverse depicts a bald eagle at rest clutching an olive branch, with the legend “Peace”
About Peace dollar in brief

Although the Sherman Act was repealed in 1893, it was not until 1904 that the government struck the last of the purchased silver into dollars. Once it did, production of the coin ceased. In August 1920, a paper by numismatist Farran Zerbe was read to that year’s American Numismatic Association convention in Chicago. In the paper, entitled Commemorate the Peace with a Coin for Circulation, Zerbe called for the issuance of a coin to celebrate peace. According to numismatic historian Walter Breen, this was the first time that a collector wielded enough political clout to restore the coin. And then—we gave our silver dollars to help win the war, we gave them to help restore them in commemoration of victory and peace, and we gave the silver to help the war win the peace, said Zerbe. The coin was first struck on December 28, 1921; just over a million were coined bearing a 1921 date. In 1928, the mint ceased production of the coins; more were struck during 1934 and 1934 as a result of further legislation. In 1934, the Mint resumed the coinage of silver for the coin for the use of the Peace Coin to be used for the sale of silver coins to the UK. It is uncertain who originated the idea for a US coin to commemorate the peace following World War 1; the genesis is usually traced to an article by Frank Duffield published in the November 1918 issue of The Numismatists.
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This page is based on the article Peace dollar published in Wikipedia (as of Nov. 07, 2020) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.






