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Making Coinage

Coins of the United States dollar were first minted in 1792. New coins have been produced annually since then and they make up a valuable aspect of the United States currency system.

Today, circulating coins exist in denominations of 1¢ (i.e. 1 cent or $0.01), 5¢, 10¢, 25¢, 50¢, and $1.00. Also minted are bullion (including gold, silver and platinum) and commemorative coins.

All of these are produced by the United States Mint. The coins are then sold to Federal Reserve Banks which in turn are responsible for putting coins into circulation and withdrawing them as demanded by the country's economy.

The mission of the Mint is to serve the American people by manufacturing and distributing circulating, precious metal and collectible coins and national medals, and providing security over assets entrusted to them.

 
How Coins Are Manufactured

All coins struck in the United States are struck by a pair of dies.  A die is a steel rod with a face that is the same size as the coins that it will be striking.  This steel rod will contain the design for one side of the coin.  Two of these steel rods (dies) are needed to strike coins.  One will have the obverse (front of the coin) design, and the other will have the reverse (back of the coin) design.

The dies are set up in a machine called a coining press so that a planchet (blank) will come between them.  In the older coining presses one die would be positioned above the other.  The upper die (hammer die) would come down with great force and strike the planchet while it was resting on the lower die (anvil die).  The force of the hammer die striking the planchet on the anvil die would place the images from the dies onto the planchet and the result would be a coin as we know it.  In the newer coining presses the action of the hammer die is now side-to-side rather than up and down, but the process is still essentially the same, as is the result.

 
U.S. Mint
About the United States Mint
Inside the U.S. Mint at West Point
Manufacturing Process for U.S. Coins
Secret Tunnels Under the Carson City U.S. MINT
US Quarter Minting Process - YouTube
U.S. Mint - Denver, Colorado - Youtube Video
Circulating Coins - Youtube video by the U.S. Mint
The San Francisco Mint: A Fortress Full of Money
Best Sellers | Coins Medals | US Mint Catalog Online
American Eagle Proof and Uncirculated Coins | U.S. Mint
Mint Minute - Watch the video for a quick explanation of what the Mint does.
The History of the US Mint and the Bureau of Engraving and Printing Documentary
 
Tours & Facilities
Philadelphia, PA – Production Facility
San Francisco, CA – Production Facility
Denver, CO – Production Facility
West Point, NY – Production Facility
Fort Knox, KY – Bullion Depository
Washington, DC – Headquarters
 
FIRST LOOK Inside the FEDERAL RESERVE, USD, CASH, GOLD monetary SYSTEM - Americas Money Vault, National Geographic Full Episode PART 1 For the first time, National Geographic takes you inside the heart of the money machine to places that you're not allowed to bring a camera ...straight into the vaults of some of the world's largest stashes of what you want, need and bust your butt to get: Money. Hidden deep under the streets of New York City, hundreds of billion dollars in gold bars are tucked away in a bunker that is anchored to the bedrock of Manhattan Island itself.
 
 
           
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