The half eagle was the first gold coin actually struck for the United States. The $5.00 piece was authorized to be coined by the Act of April 2, 1792, and the first type weighed 135 grains, 916 2/3 fine. The Act of June 28, 1834 changed the weight to 129 grains, 899.225 fine. Fineness became .900 by the Act of January 18, 1837.

There are many varieties among the early dates caused by changes in the number of stars, style of eagle, overdates, and differences in the size of the figures in the dates. Those dated prior to 1807 do not bear any mark of value. The 1822 half eagle is considered the most valuable regular issue coin of the entire United States series. Proofs of some dates prior to 1855 are know to exist, and all are rare. Commemorative and Bullion $5 coins have been made at West Point since 1986 and 1994 respectively, thus this is the only U.S. denomination made at each of the eight mints.

  1. CAPPED BUST TO RIGHT, SMALL EAGLE 1795-1798
  2. This type was struck from mid-1795 to early 1798, when the small eagle reverse was changed to the large or “heraldic” eagle. Note that the 1795 and 1797 dates exist for both types, but the heraldic reverses of these dates were probably struck under emergency conditions in late 1798.

    Designer: Robert Scot
    Weight; 8.75 grams
    Composition: .9167 gold, .0833 silver and copper, approx.
    Diameter: 25mm
    Reeded edge

  3. CAPPED BUST TO RIGHT, HERALDIC EAGLE 1798-1807
  4. Standards same as previous issue.

  5. CAPPED BUST TO LEFT 1807-1812
  6. Designer: John Reich. Standards same as previous issue.

  7. CAPPED HEAD TO LEFT (Large Diameter) 1813-1829
  8. Standards same as previous issue. Diameter approx. 26.5mm.

  9. CAPPED HEAD TO LEFT (Reduced Diameter) 1829-1834
  10. The half eagles dated 1829 (small date) through 1834 are smaller in diameter than the earlier pieces. They also have smaller letters, dates and stars.

    Standards as before. Modified design by William Kneass. Diameter 23.8mm.

  11. CLASSIC HEAD TYPE 1834-1838
  12. As on the quarter eagle of 1834, the motto E PLURIBUS UNUM was omitted from the new, reduced size of the half eagle in 1834, to distinguish the old coins which had become worth more than face value.

    Designer; William Kneass
    Weight: 8.36 grams
    Composition: .8992 gold, .1008 silver and copper, changed to .900 gold in 1837
    Diameter: 22.5 mm
    Reeded edge
    Mints: Philadelphia, Charlotte and Dahlonega

  13. CORONET TYPE, No Motto Above Eagle 1839-1866
  14. Designer: Christian Gobrecht
    Weight: 8.359 grams
    Composition: .900 gold, .100 copper
    Diameter: (1839-1840) 22.5mm. (1840-1929) 21.6mm
    Reeded edge
    Net weight: .24187 oz. pure gold

  15. Variety 2 – Motto Above Eagle 1866-1908
  16. Designer: Christian Gobrecht
    Weight: 8.359 grams
    Composition: .900 gold, .100 copper
    Diameter: 21.6mm
    Reeded edge
    Mints: Philadelphia, Carson City, Denver, New Orleans, San Francisco
    Net weight: .24187 oz. pure gold

  17. INDIAN HEAD TYPE 1908-1929
  18. This Indian type half-eagle conforms to the quarter eagle of the same date. The sunken (incuse) designs and lettering make these two series unique in our United States coinage.

    Designer: Bela Lyon Pratt
    Weight: 8.359 grams
    Composition: .900 gold, .100 copper
    Diameter: 21.6 mm
    Reeded edge
    Mints: Philadelphia, Denver, New Orleans and San Francisco
    Net weight: .24187 oz. pure gold