1 Dollar "Peace Dollar" obverse1 Dollar "Peace Dollar" reverse
United States

1 Dollar "Peace Dollar" · “Peace Dollar

United States · 1921–2023 · Silver

Every listing identified by its certification barcode — a verifiable fact, not a guess.

The coin

The story

The Peace Dollar

In 1921, the United States struck a coin to mark the end of the deadliest war the world had ever seen. The sculptor put a broken sword on the back, swords-into-plowshares. Then a newspaper said it looked like surrender — and the Mint quietly carved it out before the first coin left the press.

Catalogue

Issuer
United States
Years
1921–2023
Metal
Silver
All United States series

On Numista · 2 catalogue types

The coin born from the end of a war

The First World War killed something like seventeen million people. When it ended, America wanted a way to say so in metal — and a small group of numismatists pushed Congress for a coin that would put peace on the country's money.

The timing worked in their favor. By 1921 the law that had governed the old Morgan dollar was satisfied, and the Mint was about to strike millions of new silver dollars anyway. The choice was simple: keep the thirty-five-year-old Morgan design, or seize the moment for something new. The peace advocates won. The Commission of Fine Arts ran a design competition, and in late 1921 the winner was chosen.

Then the Mint had to move. The design was approved on December 19, 1921. The first Peace Dollar was struck at the Philadelphia Mint on December 28 — barely a week later — under enormous pressure both political and literal. The coin's deep, sculptural relief demanded roughly 150 tons of force per strike, and the dies cracked and failed fast under the strain. A little over a million 1921 dollars made it out before the year ended. They are the only regular Peace Dollars ever struck in that towering "high relief."

The design — and the sword that vanished

The sculptor was Anthony de Francisci, an Italian-born American and, at 34, the youngest artist invited to compete. He designed both sides of the coin. For the obverse — the heads side — he needed a face for Liberty, and he used the one closest to him: his wife, Teresa de Francisci, who had emigrated from Naples as a girl. Her profile, crowned with a spiked radiate tiara like the Statue of Liberty's, became one of the most recognizable faces in American coinage.

The reverse — the tails side — shows a bald eagle perched on a rock, at rest, clutching an olive branch, with the word PEACE carved into the stone beneath it. An eagle that isn't ready to fight is the whole point.

But de Francisci's original eagle stood over a broken sword — the ancient image of "swords into plowshares," a weapon laid down. Before the coin was released, the press got wind of it. The New York Herald argued the snapped blade read as defeat, not disarmament — as if America had been beaten rather than victorious. The criticism stuck. Chief Engraver George T. Morgan — the man behind the very Morgan dollar the new coin was replacing — reworked the hub to remove the sword entirely, reportedly without de Francisci's sign-off. The version that reached pockets has the eagle and the olive branch, and no sword at all. Look closely at the rock below the eagle's talons on a sharp early strike and you can still trace where the design was reshaped.

Key facts

Collecting it: the dates that matter

A complete classic Peace Dollar set runs from 1921 to 1935 — only 24 date-and-mint combinations, which is part of why the series is so collectible. You can build most of it without breaking the bank. A handful of coins are the challenge.

The 1921 high relief is the romantic first year — the only one struck in that deep, original relief, and a coin that always wears its detail a little softly because the design fought the press. Sharp, fully struck examples command a premium.

The 1928 Philadelphia dollar is the textbook key date by mintage: just 360,649 struck, the lowest of any business strike in the series. It's scarce in every grade and a coin collectors hunt for specifically.

The 1934-S is the one that separates serious sets from casual ones. Its mintage isn't the lowest — but almost all of them went straight into commerce and got beaten up. Finding a genuinely uncirculated 1934-S, one that never circulated and kept its original surfaces, is the real test of the series. In top mint-state grades it is the undisputed king of the Peace Dollar.

Then there's the ghost: the 1964-D. In 1965, the Denver Mint struck 316,076 Peace Dollars dated 1964 — a brief, congressionally authorized run to address a coin shortage. Politics turned against it almost immediately, and the government ordered every one melted. The Mint reports all 316,076 were destroyed. Because the melt was verified by weight rather than counted coin by coin, the question has haunted the hobby for sixty years: could one have walked out a door? None has ever been legally certified, and owning one would not be legal. It remains the most famous American coin you cannot have.

A note on jargon you'll see on slabs: VAM refers to a catalog of minor die varieties (named for researchers Van Allen and Mallis) — tiny doubling and die-marker differences that a deep specialist chases. They're real, but most are footnotes, not key dates.

Questions collectors ask

Sources