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Country: United States
Type: Non-circulating coin
Years: 2018
Value: 1 Dollar (1.00 USD)
Currency: Dollar (1785-date)
Mint: Denver
Mintage: 1,400,000
Composition: 88.5% Copper, 6% Zinc, 3.5% Manganese, 2% Nickel
Weight: 8.1 g
Diameter: 26.49 mm
Thickness: 2 mm
Shape: Round
Grade: UNC
Orientation: Coin alignment ↑↓
References: KM# 680
Obverse:
Sacagawea carrying her infant son, Jean Baptiste.
Lettering:
LIBERTY
IN GOD
WE TRUST
GG
Engraver: Glenna Goodacre.
Reverse:
The design depicts Jim Thorpe, with the foreground elements highlighting his football and Olympic achievements.
Lettering:
JIM THORPE
$1
WA-THO-HUK
MG
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Translation: “WA-THO-HUK”, Thorpe’s Sac and Fox tribe name.
Engraver: Michael Gaudioso.
Edge:
Engraved with date and both mottos, the edge lettering on Presidential and Native American Dollars can be in Positions A or B. Position A: edge lettering reads upside-down when the portrait faces up; Position B: edge lettering reads normally when the portrait faces up.
Lettering: E PLURIBUS UNUM 2018
Comments:
James Francis “Jim” Thorpe (1888-1953), was born near Prague, Oklahoma, in what was then Indian Territory. Raised in the Sac and Fox tribe, he was given the native name Wa-Tho-Huk, meaning “Bright Path.” Jim Thorpe became possibly the most versatile natural athlete of the early 20th century. After a difficult youth, running away from school after several family crises, Thorpe came into his own at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. Although the residential Indian school had a mixed reputation, Carlisle then had the services of one of the great early football coaches, Glenn Scobey “Pop” Warner and it fielded a national championship football team, led by Thorpe. At the time Thorpe was the core of the school’s track and field team, also coached by Warner, and the story is that Warner was reluctant to let his track star run the risk of playing football.
Thorpe was named to the All-American first team in 1911 and 1912. In 1911, Carlisle upset Harvard 18-15, as Thorpe scored all its points, four field goals and a touchdown. In 1912, Carlisle won the national collegiate championship. It beat Army 27-6; a cadet named Dwight D. Eisenhower injured his knee trying to tackle Thorpe.
In 1912, Thorpe represented the U. S. at the Summer Olympics in Stockholm, Sweden, competing in the new Pentathlon and Decathlon as well as two field events. He easily won both multi-event medals, finishing first in eight of the combined 15 events. His point record stood for two decades. In an often-told story, King Gustav V of Sweden, presenting Thorpe a special decathlon award, told him, “You are the greatest athlete in the world,” and Thorpe replied, “Thanks, king.”
Thorpe then embarked on an incredibly varied career with the public flocking to his professional appearances in football, baseball and basketball. He played for six teams in what later became the National Football League. In 1922, he became the first president of the American Professional Football Association, precursor of the NFL. In baseball, he played for the New York Giants, the Cincinnati Reds and the Boston Braves. He also organized an all-Indian football team, reuniting some Carlisle players. Today, sports writers rank him at the top of their lists of greatest athletes of the 20th Century.
Reference : KM# 680
Source : https://en.numista.com/catalogue/pieces1...
Collection : Sacagawea Dollars (2000-Date) & Serie: Native American $1 Coin Act