A press release published by the U.S. Mint October 21, 2015 discusses two state quarter coins (Florida and Maryland) that NASA placed on a spacecraft launched in 2006. Here's an excerpt.
-Editor
For those eagerly anticipating the next round of images from the New Horizons spacecraft this month, the wait pales in comparison to the journey of two coins.
Launched Jan. 19, 2006, New Horizons has since traveled over three billion miles, but only reached Pluto in July.
The voyage has not been done alone, however. Accompanying the spacecraft are coins from the U.S. Mint's 50 State Quarters Program. The Maryland and Florida quarters were chosen to honor the states that designed and launched the spacecraft, and they have acted as spin balance weights during the trip.
Illustrator Ralph Butler created the Florida design in a single sitting and entered it into the U.S. Mint's competition at the encouragement of his mother. He added the tagline "Gateway to Discovery" out of respect for Florida's long history of exploration.
"Every artist dreams of a moment of immortality, where your art will live on for your children and grandchildren. . . . To know that the Florida quarter is out there in space is wonderful. I guess it always pays to listen to your mother!"
William Krawczewicz, who designed the Maryland quarter for the U.S. Mint, said he is honored to know his imagery is traveling the far reaches of space.
"It's unheard of," said Krawczewicz, who now works as a banknote designer for the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. "It's really amazing that something that I helped to work on has been included in a U.S. space flight mission and is three billion miles away right now. . . . The whole mission itself shows what the American journey is all about . . . living, exploring, and discovering new frontiers."
The voyage of the state quarters to Pluto represents the latest chapter in the love affair between coins and space. Twelve Sacagawea dollar coins rode with the space shuttle Columbia in 1999, while a rare 1909 U.S. penny flew to Mars with the Curiosity rover in 2012.
The article links to a video interview with Maryland state quarter designer William Krawczewicz:
Coins in Space
(www.youtube.com/watch?v=-gIEbX3ea7M)
To read the complete article, see:
State Quarter Legacy Expands Across the Galaxy
(/www.usmint.gov/pressroom/insidethemint/index.cfm?action=md-fl-state-qtr-galaxy)
Wayne Homren, Editor
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