presidchle seal
1/2 if the quarter is 'fair'.
The tails side is the side without the head on it.
If you have a Liberty Seated Dime, the "CC" mint mark will be on the reverse [tails] side of the coin at the bottom and can be either inside the wreath or just below it. If you have a Liberty Seated Quarter the "CC" mint mark will be on the reverse [tails] side of the coin at the bottom below the eagle. If you have a Liberty Seated Half Dollar the "CC" mint mark will be on the reverse [tails] side of the coin at the bottom below the eagle. If you have a Lbert Seated Silver Dollar the "CC" mint mark will be on the reverse [tails] side of the coin at the bottom below the eagle. If you have a Silver Trade Dollar the "CC" mint mark will be on the reverse [tails] side of the coin a the bottom just above the "D" in "DOLLAR" If you have a Morgan Silver Dollar the "CC" mint mark will be on the reverse [tails] side of the coin at the bottom below the wreath.
The sides of a penny are called heads and tails. The side with an image of Abraham Lincoln is commonly referred to as the heads side, while the opposite side with the Lincoln Memorial is known as the tails side.
Because there is usually the head of some emperor or king or queen on the other side. To call the opposite side "tails" just seems to be as good as calling it anything else.
Please rephrase your question and post a new one. You can't have a quarter with only one side!A whole quarter weighs 5.67 gm.
The Statue of Liberty and an outline of the state.
The reverse of a coin is called "tails" because the obverse traditionally shows "heads" (relief images of famous people).
1899 would make it a Barber quarter, so the mint mark is located on the reverse (tails) side, just below the eagle's tail feathers.
1/2 if the quarter is 'fair'.
50 %
a quarter
The tails side is the side without the head on it.
The mint mark on Washington quarters dated 1932-1964 is on the reverse (tails) side below the eagle.
Washington quarters dated before 1965 have the mint mark on the reverse (tails) side, near the bottom, just above the second letter "r" in the word "quarter."
50/50
The side or quarter toward which the wind blows is the lee quarter, or side. the side from which the wind is blowing is the windward quarter, or side.