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YB30-0101
YB30-0101YB30-0101
ID Number: YB30-0101 Description: ½ Dollar (Walking Liberty Half Dollar) Country or State: United States of America Year: 1936 Currency: DOLLAR ($) Obverse: Liberty walking left wearing U.S. flag gown, sunrise at left Obverse Legend: LIBERTY • IN GOD WE TRU ...Read more



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ID Number: YB30-0101
Description: ½ Dollar (Walking Liberty Half Dollar)
Country or State: United States of America
Year: 1936
Currency: DOLLAR ($)
Obverse: Liberty walking left wearing U.S. flag gown, sunrise at left
Obverse Legend: LIBERTY • IN GOD WE TRUST • 1936
Reverse: Eagle with spread wings advancing left
Reverse Legend: UNITED STATES OF AMERICA • E PLURIBUS UNUM • HALF DOLLAR
Designer: Adolph Alexander Weinman
Edge: Reeded
Mint Mark: D (Denver)
Orientation: Coin alignment ↑↓
Composition: Silver 0.900 (Ag)
Diameter: 30.6 mm
Thickness: 2.15 mm
Weight: 12.500 grams (0.3617 oz.)
Mintage: 4,252,400
Catalog Number: KM# 142

The Walking Liberty half dollar was a silver 50-cent piece or half dollar coin issued by the United States Mint from 1916 to 1947; it was designed by Adolph A. Weinman.

In 1915, the new Mint Director, Robert W. Woolley, came to believe that he was not only allowed but required by law to replace coin designs that had been in use for 25 years. He therefore began the process of replacing the Barber coinage: dimes, quarters and half dollars, all bearing similar designs by long-time Mint Engraver Charles E. Barber, and first struck in 1892. Woolley had the Commission of Fine Arts conduct a competition, as a result of which Weinman was selected to design the dime and half dollar.

Weinman's design of Liberty striding towards the Sun for the half dollar proved difficult to perfect, and Treasury Secretary William G. McAdoo, whose department included the Mint, considered having Barber create his own design. Mint officials were successful in getting Weinman's design into production, although it never struck very well, which may have been a factor in its replacement by the Franklin half dollar beginning in 1948. Nevertheless, art historian Cornelius Vermeule considered the piece to be among the most beautiful US coins. Since 1986, a modification of Weinman's obverse design has been used for the American Silver Eagle.