Moneta Gallery Coin Museum



Users 22,483
Photos 3,383
Comments 351
Views 16,331,152
Disk Space 346.6mb

SunMon TueWed ThuFri Sat
     12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930

Moneta 2454
Zantetsuken 293
Chinacash 170
stretrader99z 133
numismatist6 100

1917StgLibQtr.jpg
1917 Standing Libert
Moneta

[ United States of America ]
Wilbur.jpg
W.W. Wilbur - Slave
Moneta

[ United States of America ]
USA-Qtr-1917_typ2.jpg
USA Standing Liberty
Moneta

[ United States of America ]
TOM-235.jpg
Tombstone AZ - Every
Moneta

[ Tokens ]
UNITED_STATES_TEXAS_Half_Dollar_1934.jpg
UNITED STATES~Half D
Zantetsuken

[ United States of America ]
USA_Az_Courtland.jpg
Courtland, Arizona -
Moneta

[ Tokens ]
· more ·

 

« Previous image · Next image »

US_Apollo-XI_-5D_2019
USA - Apollo XI 5 Dollar - 2019

« Previous image  · Slide Show · Next image »

Moneta



Registered: August 2005
Location: Arizona USA
Posts: 2,365
users gallery
I lived in Florida, just a few miles inland from the Cape during the Apollo Moon Landing era, my dad worked there at the time. I'll let the US Mint tell you more about this series, I'll use their photo too...
The world eagerly watched on July 20, 1969, as Neil Armstrong and Edwin “Buzz” E. Aldrin, Jr. took mankind’s first steps on the Moon. This unprecedented engineering, scientific, and political achievement was the culmination of the efforts of an estimated 400,000 Americans and secured our Nation’s leadership in space for generations to come. The Apollo 11 crew—Armstrong, Aldrin, and Michael Collins—safely returned to Earth on July 24, 1969, fulfilling the national goal set in 1961 by President John F. Kennedy. Nearly half a century later, the United States is the only country ever to have attempted and succeeded in landing humans on a celestial body other than Earth and safely returning them home.
In recognition of the 50th anniversary of the first manned landing on the Moon, Public Law 114-282 authorizes a four-coin program: a curved $5 gold coin, a curved $1 silver coin, a curved half-dollar clad coin, and a curved 5 ounce $1 silver proof coin.
As required by the Public Law, the Mint invited American artists to design a common obverse image that is emblematic of the United States Space Program leading up to the first manned Moon landing. The Secretary of the Treasury selected the design from a juried competition. Gary Cooper of Belfast, Maine, created the winning design in the Apollo 11 Commemorative Coin Design Competition. (US Mint) Of the regular series of issues, including the silver and clad coins, the BU issue of this 5 Dollar gold coin was the lowest at a still respectable 12,035 struck in a cup shaped planchet, that the flattened photo does not show.


The text would indicate that only the obverse image (the 1st, or A, moon footprint) of the coin was designed by Mr. Cooper (GC initial is there), so I need to look into the reverse design origins which were based on a another Apollo XI photo. I found an interesting enhanced photo effort by Denis Shiryaev that reveals interesting details of this iconic photo and coin.
SEE the site for a short video at this YouTube [ link ]
· Date: June 5, 2020 · Views: 1,033 · Filesize: 136.9kb · Dimensions: 900 x 452 ·
Keywords: USA - Apollo XI gold 5 Dollar 2019
Denomination: 5 Dollars
Date/Mintmark: 2019 W - Westpoint
Condition: PCGS MS70
Weight: 8.359 g; .242 oz AGW; 21.6 mm
Metal: .900 gold
Additional Categories: Space - the Final Frontier

« more
USspouseVanBuren.jpg
US_Morgan-Dollar-Half-oz-gold_Smithsonian.jpg
US_Pres_15th_Lib.jpg
US_Eagle-2021-typ2.jpg
US_2021-Eagle-Rev2.jpg
USA_Morgan-Dol-1921-MS65.jpg
US_StgQtr_1920D_mike.jpg
US_Columbian_half_1892.jpg
US_StoneMtn_1925.jpg
US_FR_Libertas_Americana_Ag.jpg
US_Apollo-XI_-5D_2019.jpg
USA_Peace_1921HR_MS64.jpg
USA_2Cents_1864.jpg
USA_Connecticut_Oak.jpg
Flyeagle1c_1858sl.jpg
USA_Lewis_Clark_PxlII.jpg
2017_ULTRA_CAMEO.jpg
USA_Indian_5D_1908.jpg
USA_MdlOfHonor_BU11P.jpg
USA_BaldEagle_1D_08P.jpg
USA_Texas_50c1934.jpg
· more »


Photo Sharing Gallery by PhotoPost
Copyright © 2007 All Enthusiast, Inc.

No portion of this page, text, images or code, may be copied, reproduced, published or distributed in any medium without the expressed written permission of the copyright holder.