No US quarters are dated 1975, all have the dual date 1776-1976
The first US quarter was minted in 1796. It had a portrait of Miss Liberty on the coin.
All quarters*, halves, and dollars minted in 1975 and 1976 carried a dual date to honor the country's bicentennial.(*) The coin's denomination is a quarter, just as it's spelled on the back.
The mint mark for the 1970 US quarter dollar is located on the obverse [heads] side of the coin just to the right of the ribbon on George Washington's hair at his neck. If here is no letter there this means the coin was mnted in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. If there is a "D" there this means the coin was minted at Denver, Colorado. If there is an "S" there this means the coin is a proof coin and was minted at the San Francisco, California mint.
Cent, Nickel, Dime, Quarter Dollar, Half Dollar.
It may not be from Colorado and it's definitely not from 1876. Unless it's uncirculated, it's only worth 25 cents.Please look at the other State Quarters in your pocket change. ALL of them have 2 dates - the date at the top is the year their state was admitted to the Union, and the date at the bottom is the year the coin was minted. If you check there you'll see that your coin was minted in 2006.The place where the coin was minted is indicated on the other side of the coin by a small letter next to the end of Washington's wig. D = Denver, P = Philadelphia. So if it has a D, at least it was minted in Colorado.*(*) That doesn't imply that a Vermont quarter was minted in Vermont or a Kansas quarter came from Kansas, though. ALL current circulating coins are minted either in Denver or Philadelphia, so the fact that you may have a quarter honoring Colorado that was minted in the same state is pure coincidence.
1¢. The extra letters were added privately, after the coin was minted, and that means it's considered to be an altered or damaged coin.
The first US quarter was minted in 1796. It had a portrait of Miss Liberty on the coin.
Assuming you mean the Florida quarter, it was minted in 2004.
Numbers on a coin usually signify the year it was minted.
No US gold coins were minted in 1975. Proof sets contained only the standard circulating coins of the time: A 1975 dated cent, nickel, and dime, and a dual-dated 1776-1976 Bicentennial quarter, half dollar, and dollar.
Yes, Hawaii's quarter was one of the last to be minted in 2009.
All quarters*, halves, and dollars minted in 1975 and 1976 carried a dual date to honor the country's bicentennial.(*) The coin's denomination is a quarter, just as it's spelled on the back.
Do you mean a quarter DOLLAR? Quarter eagles were not issued in 1968. And could you describe "double 'stamped"" ? (note the term is actually "struck" in coin jargon).
The coin needs to be seen for an assessment, take it to a coin dealer.
The mint mark for the 1970 US quarter dollar is located on the obverse [heads] side of the coin just to the right of the ribbon on George Washington's hair at his neck. If here is no letter there this means the coin was mnted in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. If there is a "D" there this means the coin was minted at Denver, Colorado. If there is an "S" there this means the coin is a proof coin and was minted at the San Francisco, California mint.
Washington quarters were first struck in 1932 to honor the 200th anniversary of his birth. The first quarter was minted in 1796 and called a Draped Bust quarter. The word "minted" means the coin has been made.
Cent, nickel, dime, quarter, half-dollar, dollar.