A mint mark is a letter or other symbol to indicate where a coin was minted.
It's called a mint mark and indicates where the coin was minted. The mint mark 'D' stands for Denver.
The capital letter on each US coin tells you at which mint it was made; P is for the Philadelphia mint, S is for the San Francisco mint, and D is for the Denver mint. See the related question below.
Couscous, Lamb and Dates! green tea with mint!
D represents the Denver Mint. It's not just limited to quarters or even silver quarters. All coins minted in Denver have a D mint mark.
The red stripe provides the Cinnamon flavor, while the white cane portion is vanilla (with a hint of mint).
A mint mark on any coin (not just the United States) indicates where a coin was minted. For modern US coins, P stands for Philadelphia, D is Denver, and S is San Francisco.
All circulating "golden" (actually brass) dollars come from the U.S. Mint! The 17 stars represent the 17 states in the Union at the time of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, which Sacagawea guided for part of the journey.
The royal mint
Flying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesFlying Mint BunniesHetalia FTWRead more: How_does_conserving_electricity_help_protect_water
JLA is a monogram, not an acronym, and belongs to the artist Jack L. Ahr who designed the bicentennial quarter's reverse. The fact that your quarter doesn't have a mint mark simply means it was minted in Philadelphia. The P mint mark wasn't used on quarters (and most other coins) until 1980.
Mint is from a mint herb.