(center) with the first set of the
Bicentennial coins, November 13, 1974 as American Revolutionary Bicentennial Administration Director
John Warner looks on. President Nixon appointed Brooks director of the U.S. Mint, the third woman named to the post. She oversaw the first production of the
Eisenhower dollar coin, as well as the design of the
Bicentennial quarter, half dollar, and dollar coins for the
United States Bicentennial. She is credited with saving the original
San Francisco Mint building, known as the "Granite Lady," by transferring it to the Treasury Department. The building, one of the few to survive the
Great Earthquake of 1906, had been vacant since 1937 and fallen into disrepair. It is now both a
National Historic Landmark and a
California Historical Landmark. Brooks received the "I Left My Heart In San Francisco" Award in 1974 from the San Francisco Convention and Visitors Bureau for her preservation efforts. , this tour still is the only time that the inside of the USBD has been seen by members of the public. In addition, Brooks was awarded the
American Numismatic Association's Medal of Merit in 1988, and was the first woman to receive the
United States Treasury Department's highest honor, the Alexander Hamilton Award. She was inducted into the
University of Idaho Alumni Association's Hall of Fame in 1970. The university also conferred upon her an honorary doctorate in 1999. ==Death==