Please look more carefully at your coin! Like ALL state quarters, it carries 2 dates - the date its associated state was admitted to the Union, and the date it was minted.
Delaware was the first state in 1797, but the minting date (at the bottom) is 1999.
Most Delaware quarters, like all other state quarters, are worth only face value. There is however an error variety that can sell for up to $50. If Washington's head points to the SAME edge of the quarter as the head of the horse's rider on the other side, you have one of these errors. But if the horse and rider point to the side with the bottom of Washington's neck, you have an ordinary coin worth, well, a quarter.
PLEASE be sure to compare your coin to others before concluding that you have an error. ALL U.S. coins are designed so that the heads and tails sides point in opposite directions when the coin is flipped side-to-side like the pages of a book.
Please check your coin again. The US didn't mint any quarters from 1797 to 1803.
Please look at the coin again. No US quarters were struck in 1797 and the Washington series started in 1932. Post new question.
Please look at the coin again. No US quarters were struck in 1797 and the Washington series started in 1932. Post new question.
No quarters have been made in Delaware. No US coin dated 1965 has a mintmark or any silver in them, the coin is face value.
The top date of 1787 makes it a Delaware, Pennsylvania, or New Jersey quarter, all of which were actually minted in 1999. The coin is worth 25 cents.
Please check your coin again. The US didn't mint any quarters from 1797 to 1803.
Please look at the coin again. No US quarters were struck in 1797 and the Washington series started in 1932. Post new question.
Please look at the coin again. No US quarters were struck in 1797 and the Washington series started in 1932. Post new question.
No quarters have been made in Delaware. No US coin dated 1965 has a mintmark or any silver in them, the coin is face value.
The top date of 1787 makes it a Delaware, Pennsylvania, or New Jersey quarter, all of which were actually minted in 1999. The coin is worth 25 cents.
A US quarter has a face value of 25 cents.
A 1765 US quarter does not exist.
As of 2021, the Delaware quarter is worth 25 cents, its face value. However, if you have a proof or silver version of the coin, it may be worth more to collectors.
It's not a real coin and it's not from 1797. Two-headed (or tailed) coins are called "magician's coins". They're made by cutting two genuine coins in half using jeweler's tools and then swapping the sides. It's considered to be an altered or damaged item with no numismatic value. However no US quarters were minted in 1797 and no modern State Quarters carry that date either, so it's probably not even made from a genuine US coin.
The first US quarter was struck in 1796.
Its value would depend upon which coin it was and its condition.
No US quarters were struck in 1922. The US did not make ANY quarters dated 1922.