This is a 1925 U.S. half dollar coin that was minted in Philadelphia in 1925 to raise money for the Stone Mountain Confederate Monumental Association. This coin is made of 90% silver and weighs 12.5 grams, has a reeded edge and a diameter of 30.6 millimeters. The coin is circulated and its grade is unknown. On the obverse, it features the design of Confederate Generals Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson on horseback. On the reverse, it features an eagle poised on a mountain crag with stars visible in the background and the denomination at the bottom. The engraver was Gutzon Borglum.

As you can see this coin still has very good details and is not highly worn. This would make a great addition to someone's collection, at a very reasonable price.

The 1925 Stone Mountain Memorial Half Dollar was one of four different commemorative coins issued for the year. The coins were authorized to commemorate the soldiers of the south and recently passed President Warren G. Harding. Ultimately, the former president did not appear on the coin, which instead took focus on two heroes of the south.

Gutzon Borglum was the designer of both the obverse and reverse of the coin. He had been commissioned by the Stone Mountain Confederate Memorial Association to create a monument to the leaders of the south on the large deposit of visible solid granite. His initial plans were for a carving 200 feet high and 1,300 feet wide. Completion of the monument would not take place until 1970 by a different sculptor and on a smaller scale.

The 1925 Stone Mountain Half Dollars had a maximum authorized mintage of 5 million coins in order to raise funds for the project. This represented the highest authorized mintage since the 1892 Columbian Half Dollar. Despite a large number of enthusiastic supporters, sales were ultimately 1,314,709.

Authorization: Public Law 68-46
Maximum Authorized Mintage: 5,000,000

A different design was ultimately used for the actual sculpture on Stone Mountain.