As you can see from the other State Quarters in your pocket change, ALL of them have the minting date at the bottom, while the date at the top is the year that state joined the Union.
All five designs issued in 2000 honored states admitted in 1788, and none are rare. Feel free to spend any that you found in change.
Unless it's Proof, it's just a quarter.
At present, 25 cents Canadian is worth 24 cents American.
It's worth one cent.
$2000 1987 paper peco worth today in usd is $13437.14
If it is a current issue Mexican note, then it's worth $157. An old pre-1989 2000 Peso note is worth 60¢ - $4 in perfect condition to a collector.
1788 is the year Virginia became a state, but the quarter was minted in 2000. It's worth all of 25 cents.
1788 is the year Virginia became a state, but the quarter was minted in 2000. It's worth all of 25 cents.
1788 is the year Maryland became a state, and 2000 is the year the quarter was minted. It's worth exactly 25 cents.
The coin was made in 2000 not 1788 and it's 25 cents.
No matter how you spell it, it wasn't made in 1788 it was made in 2000 and it's just a quarter.
1788 is the year South Carolina officially became a state. The quarter itself was actually minted in 2000, and is worth 25 cents.
It depends where it's from, and what condition it's in.
Uh, please look at the rest of the state quarters in your pocket change. They ALL have the state's date of admission to the Union at the top of the coin and the date they were minted at the bottom. So your quarter is dated 2000, not 1788 - that's when NH joined the Union! Bottom lline, it's only worth 25 cents. Billions of state quarters have been minted since 1999.
If the quarter has a picture of George Washington on one side, with the Maryland state capital and phrase "The Old Line State" on the other, then it's a 2000 state quarter, worth exactly 25 cents.
1788 is the year South Carolina became a state. Look under the design and you'll see that the coin was actually minted in 2000. It's worth 25 cents.
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 US Mint did not start minting quarter dollars until 1796.