Most 1999 Delaware quarters found in change are worth only face value.
However there were several types of errors. The most common was due to what's called a filled die; that happens when one of the metal dies that's used to strike the coins gets some grease into the recess that forms a letter or number and prevents it from appearing on the finished coin. For example, some coins say "FIRST STAT" instead of STATE. Filled die errors are quite common and are generally worth less than a dollar, sometimes only a few cents more than the coin's face value.
The one major error found on Delaware quarters is a rotated reverse. You have to be careful when identifying it. All standard U.S. coins have their back sides oriented 180º to their fronts. That is, if you hold the front of the coin right-side up and turn it like you would flip a book page, the back will be upside down. Some Delaware quarters were accidentally struck so that both sides point the same way when flipped like a book page. While these can be quite valuable no new finds have been reported in recent years.
All US quarters made before 1999 have an eagle on the back. Please specify a date.
It is just a quarter.
It's just a quarter, spend it.
A mint condition 2008 Arizona quarter is worth an estimated 95 cents.
Unless it's Proof, it's just a quarter.
The quarter probably says "Ceasar Rodney" below the horse's head, because it's a 1999 Delaware state quarter. It's worth 25 cents.
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.
Did you look under the horse? It's dated 1999, the year the coin was struck. 1787 is the year Delaware became the First State.
The 1999-S silver proof quarters are about $8.00.
Those are the letters WC, the initials of William Cousins, who designed the Delaware quarter.
A 1999-S Delaware Silver Proof Quarter, certified as a PR-70 Deep Cameo example has a listed retail value of $3,000.00.
Yes, the Delaware 1999 quarter misprinted in gold could be worth more to collectors than its face value, depending on the extent of the misprint and its rarity. It is recommended to have it evaluated by a professional coin appraiser to determine its exact value.
Assuming that description refers to the quarter showing a man riding a horse on it, that's the 1999 Delaware state quarter. It actually features Caesar Rodney, not Paul Revere (the name is even mentioned on it), and is worth exactly 25 cents. If by chance the quarter says 1776-1976, with an image of a man with a drum, then it's a common bicentennial quarter, also worth 25 cents.
The Wisconsin quarter came out in 2004, not 1999. It's worth 25 cents.
The coin is either counterfeit or its an error.
Given that the U.S. Mint didn't begin production until 1793, odds are that your quarter features Delaware, Pennsylvania, or New Jersey, all of which became states in 1787. The coin was minted in 1999, and is worth exactly twenty-five cents.
twenty-five cents