Like past U.S. Armed Forces 2.5 Ounce Silver Medals from the United States Mint, the Army medal sold out. It was not a frenzied sellout that happened within minutes, hours or a single day. Instead, it took several days — also like previous issues.
Released Monday, March 6, for $175, the 99.9% fine silver medal was unavailable by Saturday, March 11, selling out at 12:50 p.m. ET.
The medal’s product page now presents a "Remind Me" option in the event any become available due to situations like order cancellations.
Armed Forces 2.5 Ounce Silver Medals are each limited to a mintage of 10,000. Earlier released medals honor the Air Force, Coast Guard, Marine Corps, and Navy. The final one in the large, 2-inch diameter series is yet to be scheduled for release. It will celebrate the Space Force.
The first medals went on sale for $160. They have performed well in the secondary market with those offered in original packaging realizing from about $210 to $340.
Part of the U.S. Mint’s Armed Forces Silver Medals Program is to offer 1-ounce silver and bronze medals that share the same designs as the big medals. To date, Coast Guard and Air Force 1 ounce silver medals have been released for $75 apiece, as has an Air Force bronze medal for $20. These smaller medals have no mintage limits.
The U.S. Mint’s collection of military medals is available for purchase here.
Thought it would sellout on day 2. As nice as this large medal is, it seems they could have done better. The obverse is ok. The reverse was disappointing to me.
The Army obverse design was too similar to the Marine medal with soldiers with guns facing right. Need better artistic influence in thought as well as design. Looking forward to the final frontier space medal.
I like the depiction of the Continental soldier. That’s about it.
Continental; hmmm. Is that an early American or someone from Europe?
I think Trump should design it as the Space Force is his legacy tag. I’m sure it would be “beautiful.”
The biggest 2.5 medal ever. Contains 5 ounces. But. He only dabbles in gold. If he poops in a golden toilet and enjoys golden showers, imagine what he’d do to silver
Yes, Mar-a-Lago is pretentious, but golden showers are over the top.
And it would be “yuuuuge” Craig 😉
Like nothing ever before. So big you won’t believe it.
😉
Beautiful like you’ve never seen before.
🙂
“People say to me, Mr. President, Sir, there’s no one else like you!”
I recall a lot of negative comments with the Marine medal obverse design being too cartoonish. I like this one better. I just wish it had more information, such as the date made and a mint mark. I worry that the Mint will re-issue the same exact medal in a later year and there will be no distinction, and no real final mintage.
I think the only medals that have a year minted and mint mark are the Silver Liberty. Bronze & presidential don’t have a year or mint mark
Some of the commemorative medals do, but most don’t. A few that come to mind are the 9-11 medals (with either P or W mint mark, and 2011 year). And the 2018 WW I silver dollar and medal sets (the Marine medal has S mint mark; Air Service has D; Army has W; and the Navy and Coast Guard medals each have P mint mark: all have 2018 year on them).
This one came to mind because if I recall there was a limit of 2 from each mint. Beautiful medal.
https://www.usmint.gov/coins/coin-medal-programs/medals/2016-american-liberty-silver
blob:https://www.coinnews.net/688d5ef7-18f4-49b9-9494-0dd05e825996
I didn’t catch it the first time I read your comment, E.C. Guru, but upon second review I managed to grok the part about the “final frontier” space medal. Brilliant!
ECU, hop on the Space Force medal. Will be the first medal minted by US Mint for that service. Will have value just for that reason alone.
With both cheesy logo and service anthem the Mint medal might be the best thing Space Force has at the moment 😉
Is it true Space Force is going to put out forest fires from low earth orbit?
This 2.5 oz silver medal was made available for purchase again this morning March 16 at 8:07am Central Time.
It took 6 long days to become “currently unavailable” – at $70 per ounce ($175 issue price). Such a deal!
NumisdudeTX
In 1986 Seth, silver was about $5.50 an ounce and I bought this really nice silver proof commemorative coin from the mint for $20. Wasn’t even an ounce. Today I can still buy that Statue of Liberty commemorative for $20. I still find it an attractive coin but I just don’t buy very many attractive coins.
But do you have a football phone?
Doesn’t everyone?