Unless it's uncirculated, face value only.
To explain, your quarter wasn't minted in 1788 nor was it made in New Hampshire. It's one of the State Quarters series minted from 1999 to 2009 honoring each of the 50 states and 6 other districts of the US. 1788 is the date New Hampshire was admitted to the Union; the minting year (2000) is at the bottom of the reverse side.
Hundreds of millions of state quarters were minted; except for a few issues that had minting errors any that you find in change are only worth, well, a quarter.
The date 2000 is clearly visible below the 1788 date. It's a quarter, spend it.
New Hampshire was created in 1788.
1788
No, the value of the die mark on a New Hampshire State Quarter is not very high to begin with, and the die mark on it may infact decrease the value.
Given that the U.S. Mint didn't begin production of coins until 1793, what you have is a modern state quarter for Georgia, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maryland, South Carolina, New Hampshire, Virginia, or New York, all of which became states in 1788. The coin is worth 25 cents.
In 1788.
In 1788.
It became the ninth state in 1788.
New Hampshire ratified the US Constitution on June 21, 1788. New Hampshire was the 9th state to be admitted to the Union.
Is the 1788 quarter worth anything new york one
1788
1788
In 1788.