
Mourners gathered to pay their respects at a funeral in the nation’s capital on Saturday.
But this was no ordinary funeral, as the “deceased” being eulogized at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C., was the penny, which was discontinued earlier this year. The mock funeral included a casket with former President Abraham Lincoln and former First Lady Mary Todd Lincoln being portrayed by actors who joined hundreds to mark the end of production of the one-cent coin.
“Actors portraying presidents George Washington and Thomas Jefferson also spoke along with someone depicting President Lincoln’s assassin, John Wilkes Booth,” Fox 10 reported. “Other speakers included a descendant of President Lincoln, Knowlton Anderson, and an economist, Ara Kharazian, who presented an ‘autopsy report’ explaining how each penny costs more than three cents to produce.”
(Video Credit: Action News Now)
The event was hosted by financial management platform Ramp and included a portrait of Lincoln made completely out of pennies.
As previously reported, the last penny was struck at the US Mint in Philadelphia last month, marking the end of the coin’s production after more than two centuries. US Treasurer Brandon Beach was on hand for the history-making moment, as the penny, which has been in circulation since 1793, was pressed for the very last time.
Earlier this month, the final minted pennies were auctioned off for $16.7 million.
The final minted pennies were auctioned off today, shattering expectations by bringing in an astounding $16.7 million, which far exceeded the anticipated $5 million.
These historic coins, a symbol of our nation’s rich heritage, are a testament to the growing strength of our… pic.twitter.com/lkSxpa0fbt
— U.S. Treasurer Brandon Beach (@TreasurerBeach) December 12, 2025
At the mock funeral for the coin, mourners “paid” their respects by placing pennies in the casket.
“There was also a special penny-press machine allowing attendees to get special souvenir honoring the one-cent coin,” Fox 10 reported.
Reactions to the drama poured in on social media.
I’m still cackling that they held a funeral for the penny, Pennywise showed up, and people genuinely wondered if 50 Cent was going to make an appearance.
https://t.co/26fhFDb9gR
— Vanessa Nguyen Hernández (@hernandez_64876) December 20, 2025
DC is not a real place. And I live here! Why did they just have a funeral for the penny. Yes like 1¢. They had a casket and everything!
— Murph & Turf (@JamesMurphy) December 21, 2025
“What did you do this weekend?”
Oh I went to the penny funeral
“The what?” https://t.co/0hBfUmh70U
— Khalil (@HeadHonchoo) December 20, 2025
there are millions of pennies in jars in people’s homes
who organizes the drama club events?
— Lewis Zero (@intheyearzero) December 21, 2025
A 230-year run ends quietly a small coin with a big place in history finally gets its farewell
— Michael E. NIX (@MichaelNIXG) December 22, 2025
Well that’s super weird
— Alex Nitzberg (@alexnitzberg) December 22, 2025
DONATE TO BIZPAC REVIEW
Please help us! If you are fed up with letting radical big tech execs, phony fact-checkers, tyrannical liberals and a lying mainstream media have unprecedented power over your news please consider making a donation to BPR to help us fight them. Now is the time. Truth has never been more critical!
- Chilling photo of girl ,7, kneeling in delivery truck as Fed-Ex driver kidnapper whistles behind wheel - April 8, 2026
- Trump-backed Republican wins MTG’s vacated seat in ‘extremely crucial’ victory - April 8, 2026
- Fired assistant files lawsuit against Howard Sterns, claims bizarre rules for personal staff - April 7, 2026
Comment
We have no tolerance for comments containing violence, racism, profanity, vulgarity, doxing, or discourteous behavior. Thank you for partnering with us to maintain fruitful conversation.
BPR INSIDER COMMENTS
Scroll down for non-member comments or join our insider conversations by becoming a member. We'd love to have you!


