The first real person on a dollar coin was President Eisenhower in 1971. No silver dollar coins have portraits of real people.
Abraham Lincoln had his likeness put on the one cent coin (i.e.Penny) in 1909 in honor of his birth in 1809 and so was the first actual person to be on a US coin.
The first living person on a US coin was Thomas Kirby. When the Alabama Centennial Commemorative Half was issued in 1921, it had the current governor on it. He lived until 1943. Only about 65,000 were released and not many exist in uncirculated condition today.
In god we trust first appeared on the two cent coin in 1864, but only since 1938 have all coins had the motto inscribed.
The first coin authorized by the US Government was the Fugio Cent. It pictured a sundial as the primary design and had no portrait. Most early US coins carry an image of "Miss Liberty". The first coin struck for general circulation that showed the portrait of an actual person was the Lincoln Cent, introduced in 1909.
The 1946 dime was when he first appeared on the coin
It is not known.
it was made by a person
The first real person on a dollar coin was President Eisenhower in 1971. No silver dollar coins have portraits of real people.
Such a coin does not exist.Images of George VI first appeared on coins in 1937.
The first real person to be on a circulating coin was A. Lincoln in 1909.
Booker T Washington
The first US silver dollar coin was struck in 1794 the designer was Robert Scot. Lady Liberty is not a real person.
None that I can find in my references. The £1 coin - the "round pound" - appeared in 1983 and the £2 coin was first issued in 1986
The British One Pound coin was first issued in 1983 during the reign of Queen Elizabeth II. Amongst the innumerable things that have never appeared on a British One Pound coin, every king and queen prior to Queen Elizabeth II has never appeared on a British One Pound coin.
The Phoenicians1500 BC were the first people to use metal money There is no record of the actual person that minted the first coin hower.
Both "E Pluribus Unum" and "In God We Trust" had appeared previously on other denominations, but the Lincoln cent was the first time those mottoes appeared on the 1-cent coin.