The M on all Standing Liberty quarters is the monogram of the coin's designer Hermon A MacNeil (and yes, he did spell his first name with an 'o')
The mint mark position is roughly symmetric on the pedestal to the other side of Miss Liberty - blank = Philadelphia, S = San Francisco, D = Denver.
Appeasement until 3 September 1939 when they both declared war on Germany.
In the 1930's he invented the helicopter
Sept. 11, 1930 was on a Thursday.
throat cutting :) Better to say in military fashion that "no quarter", no mercy is shown to the enemy.
1917 makes it a Standing Liberty quarter, so the mint mark is just above and to the left of the date (the mint mark on quarters wouldn't return to the obverse again until 1968). No mark indicates Philadelphia, S is San Francisco, and D is Denver.
The M is not a mintmark but the monogram of the designer. See the related question below.
The "M" is not a mint mark, it's the monogram of the designer H. A. MacNeil. Please see the Related Question for more information.
Gems of M-G-M - 1930 was released on: USA: 19 May 1930
about a quarter (25 cents)
500
No. A quarter of a mile is equal to 402 metres (m), not 600 m.
This type of quarter was designed by Hermon A. MacNeil. The M is MacNeil's initial.
M. Lindeman has written: 'The quarter horse breeder' -- subject(s): Quarter horse
1930 was the last year for a Standing Liberty quarter, with a date of 1941 it's a Washington quarter. Post new question.
That's called a Standing Liberty quarter. They were minted 1916-1930.
M. R. Peacocke was born in 1930.
M Street Bridge was created in 1930.