By Stephanie Meredith

April 6, 2020

This page contains the following video: https://www.youtube.com/embed/FnRboZn7Zvg

Watch this video for detailed views of the National Park of American Samoa and Weir Farm National Historic Site quarters made at the West Point Mint and featuring a special privy mark.

This year the U.S. Mint will issue circulating coins and other numismatic products that feature a privy mark honoring the 75th anniversary of the end of World War II. A privy mark, in general terms, is a symbol that communicates information about a coin’s production.

Countries around the world have used privy marks for centuries. In the past, privy marks were used to identify the mint or moneyer that made the coin, the artist that designed it, or to represent other aspects of the coin’s origin. More recently, mints use the marks to commemorate events and for other marketing purposes. Many countries now recognize the mint through an alphabetical mint mark rather than a pictorial privy mark.

Privy Marks on U.S. Coins

In the 19th century, the U.S. Mint used arrows on coins to signal a change in the way coins were made. Although records don’t refer to these arrows as privy marks, the symbols did serve the same function by communicating information about production. In 1853, the Mint temporarily reduced the weight of silver coins. From 1853 to 1855, silver coins featured arrows on either side of the date to indicate the weight change. The Mint removed the arrows when the weight returned to its previous amount. The weight increased in 1873 and 1874 and again, the Mint used arrows to communicate that.

In 2009, the American Eagle Platinum Coin included an eagle privy mark on the reverse. The design came from an original coin punch found at the Philadelphia Mint. The privy mark appeared on American Eagle platinum coins until 2014 as part of the Preamble to the Constitution series.

The 2019-2032 American Innovation™ $1 Coin Program will include a different privy mark each year. Since the concepts and themes will vary throughout the program, the intent of the mark is to unify the designs. The 2019 coins featured a stylized gear privy mark on the obverse to represent industry and innovation. Mint medallic artists based the mark on the 2018 introductory coin reverse design, which depicts gears.

2020 End of World War II Privy Mark

The Mint honors the 75th anniversary of the end of World War II with a privy mark on select coins and numismatic products. The design includes “V75” inside an outline of the Rainbow Pool at the World War II Memorial in Washington, DC.

The first coins released with this privy mark are the 2020 America the Beautiful Quarters® Program coins made at the West Point Mint. On April 6, the Mint will release the National Park of American Samoa and the Weir Farm National Historic Site privy mark quarters. If time and capacity allows, West Point will strike the other three designs.

The Philadelphia and Denver Mints will mix the privy mark quarters into bulk bags of “P” and “D” quarters. The Mints will ship the bulk bags to Federal Reserve Banks across the country for distribution directly to banks. The quarters should appear in circulation within four to six weeks of their release date. Bulk bags that include privy mark quarters will not go to coin dealers.

The Mint also intends to release special American Eagle gold and silver proof coins with the end of World War II privy mark. Other numismatic products may be announced later this year.

See more Inside the Mint articles.