Please take another look. The U.S. was still at the start of the Revolution in 1776 and didn't issue any quarters until 2 decades later.
You almost certainly have a Bicentennial quarter with the dual dates 1776-1976 in honor of the country's 200th anniversary.
Okay! No silver quarter for 1776.
25 cents.
The date is 1776-1976. None of the bicentennial quarters struck general circulation have any silver or are more than face value.
Please check again. There are no coins with those date combinations. You presumably have a Bicentennial quarter - its dates will be 1776 - 1976.
It's just a Bicentennial quarter, spend it.
Okay! No silver quarter for 1776.
25 cents.
It's just a Bicentennial quarter, spend it.
The date is 1776-1976 and it's only a quarter.
The date is 1776-1976. None of the bicentennial quarters struck general circulation have any silver or are more than face value.
Please check again. There are no coins with those date combinations. You presumably have a Bicentennial quarter - its dates will be 1776 - 1976.
The date on it should read 1776-1976. It's a common U.S. bicentennial quarter, still worth 25 cents.
The mintmark is a "D" not a "P" and it's just a quarter.
The bicentennial quarter is extremely common, still worth 25 cents.
It's worth exactly 25 cents.
It's still worth 25 cents.
It's still worth 25 cents.