| half dollar (United States) | |
|---|---|
| Value: | 0.5 U.S. dollar |
| Mass: | 11.340 g (0.365 troy oz) |
| Diameter: | 30.61 mm (1.205 in) |
| Thickness: | 2.15 mm (0.085 in) |
| Edge: | 150 reeds |
| Composition: | 91.67% Cu 8.33% Ni |
| Years of minting: | 1794–present |
| Catalog number: | - |
| Obverse | |
| Design: | John F. Kennedy |
| Designer: | Gilroy Roberts |
| Design date: | 1964 |
| Reverse | |
| Design: | Presidential Seal |
| Designer: | Frank Gasparro |
| Design date: | 1964 |
The half dollar of the United States, sometimes known as the fifty-cent piece, has been produced nearly every year since the inception of the United States Mint in 1794. The only U.S. coin that has been minted more consistently is the cent.
Half dollar coins are commonly used in casinos; rolls of half dollars are kept on hand in cardrooms in the United States for games requiring 50-cent antes or bring-in bets, for dealers to pay winning naturals in blackjack, or where the house collects a rake in increments of 50 cents (usually in low-limit seven-card stud and its variants). Many slot machines also took in, and paid out in, 50-cent pieces; however, casinos in recent years have phased in "coinless" slots (for all denominations), taking in paper dollars, and paying winners through vouchers.
The half dollar's circulation, aside from use in some casinos and movie theaters, has declined significantly. The value of silver had risen by 1962-63 to the point that it became worthwhile to melt down U.S. coins for their bullion value. U.S. Silver coins (those of ten cent value and above, which contained 90% silver through 1964) began to disappear from circulation, leading the United States to change to layered composition coins made of a copper core laminated between two cupro-nickel outer faces for the 1965 - present coinage years. The Kennedy half-dollar design, however, continued to be minted in a 40% silver-clad composition from 1965–1970.
Initially the Kennedy halves were hoarded for sentimental reasons and because they were recognized as the only precious metal U.S. coin remaining in circulation. By the time mintage figures could match normal demand and the coin's composition was changed to match the newer dimes and quarters in 1971, both businesses and the public had adapted to a world in which the half dollar did not generally circulate. Other uses had been found for the half-dollar section of the cash drawer. People had gotten used to depending on quarters as the major component of change.
Most coins enter circulation through the change drawers of businesses. Hardly any businesses stock their change drawers with half dollars or dollar coins, and many banks do not stock these coins or hand them out as normal business practice, so the coins do not see much circulation. The fact that virtually no vending machines in the United States accept half dollars further curtails its circulation. However, American Sleight-of-hand magicians that specialize in coin magic prefer the half dollar for its size and weight.[citation needed]
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In addition to these regular issue coins, Half dollars are the most common denomination used for United States Commemorative Coins.
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