The first US quarters were dated 1796.
If you look more closely at your quarter (you did wonder how a 220+ year old quarter could look so shiny, right?) you'll see it has 2 dates. It's a modern state quarter. 1790 is the date its state was admitted to the union. The other date is the year it was minted.
The first US quarters were minted in 1796, so there are no 1790 quarters.You may be thinking of a 2001 quarter minted to honor Rhode Island as part of the 50 State Quarters program. It shows 1790 on its reverse side, indicating the year that Rhode Island became a state.
A 1765 US quarter does not exist.
Considering that the original U.S. Mint didn't begin production until 1793, what you most likely have is a Rhode Island state quarter, minted in 2001 (1790 is the year Rhode Island became a state). The quarter is worth exactly 25 cents.
The first US quarter was struck in 1796.
No US quarters were struck in 1922. The US did not make ANY quarters dated 1922.
A US quarter has a face value of 25 cents.
A 1765 US quarter does not exist.
The first US quarters were minted in 1796, so there are no 1790 quarters.You may be thinking of a 2001 quarter minted to honor Rhode Island as part of the 50 State Quarters program. It shows 1790 on its reverse side, indicating the year that Rhode Island became a state.
Considering that the original U.S. Mint didn't begin production until 1793, what you most likely have is a Rhode Island state quarter, minted in 2001 (1790 is the year Rhode Island became a state). The quarter is worth exactly 25 cents.
The first US quarter was struck in 1796.
No US quarters were struck in 1922. The US did not make ANY quarters dated 1922.
The coin is a 2001 Vermont State Quarter, it's 25 cents.
No US quarters were made in 1810.
No US quarters were minted in 1817.
Unless it's Proof, it's just a quarter.
13.24.7
25 cents.