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  2. United States Mint - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Mint

    The United States Mint is a bureau of the Department of the Treasury responsible for producing coinage for the United States to conduct its trade and commerce, as well as controlling the movement of bullion. [1] The U.S. Mint is one of two U.S. agencies that manufactures physical money.

  3. About - United States Mint

    www.usmint.gov/about

    The mission of the U.S. Mint is to serve the American people by manufacturing and distributing circulating, precious metal and collectible coins and national medals, and providing security over assets entrusted to us.

  4. The United States Mint

    www.usmint.gov

    United States Mint Homepage - Coins and Medals, Shop, Product Schedule, Customer Service, Education, News and Media and More.

  5. Inside the Mint - United States Mint

    www.usmint.gov/news/inside-the-mint

    Inside the Mint. The United States Mint has more than 1,650 employees working in six facilities across the country-each of whom takes pride in serving the American people by manufacturing and distributing circulating, precious metal and collectible coins and national medals, and providing security over the assets entrusted to us.

  6. U.S. Mint - USAGov

    www.usa.gov/agencies/u-s-mint

    The U.S. Mint makes the coins used as money the United States. They also produce special edition coins you can buy for coin collections.

  7. About the U.S. Mint | U.S. Mint for Kids - United States Mint

    kids.usmint.gov/learn/kids/about-the-mint

    The United States Mint is the government agency that makes coins! Coins are small, metal discs that people use as money. The Mint makes sure people in the U.S. have coins to spend, save, or collect.

  8. History Timeline | U.S. Mint for Kids - United States Mint

    kids.usmint.gov/learn/kids/about-the-mint/...

    The United States Mint begins making coins for foreign governments, the first of them struck for Venezuela dated 1876. From 1876 to the early 1980s, coins will be struck for more than 40 governments, including Hawaii before it becomes the 50th state.