25 cents. Please take a closer look. If your quarter has a picture of George Washington on one side, 1788 near the top of the other side, and it looks new, that's because it IS new. You have a State Quarter with two dates on it. 1788 is the date that the state was admitted to the Union, NOT the date the coin was minted. In addition, the mint mark next to the tail of Washington's wig will be either P, D, or (maybe) S, indicating the coin was made in Philadelphia, Denver, or San Francisco rather than in Georgia.
The minting date is at the bottom of the design on the back side. Check your pocket change - every state quarter in circulation has 2 dates on it.
25 cents. Please take a closer look. If your quarter has a picture of George Washington on one side, 1788 near the top of the other side, and it looks new, that's because it IS new. You have a State Quarter with two dates on it. 1788 is the date that the state was admitted to the Union, NOT the date the coin was minted. In addition, the mint mark next to the tail of Washington's wig will be either P, D, or (maybe) S, indicating the coin was made in Philadelphia, Denver, or San Francisco rather than in Georgia.
The minting date is at the bottom of the design on the back side. Check your pocket change - every state quarter in circulation has 2 dates on it.
100cents
It's just a state quarter that has been gold plated and it has no collectible value at all, unless you find someone that wants it.
There were no quarter dollar coins issued by the U.S. mint in 1788.
The Georgia State Quarter has a face value of 25 cents.
The coin was NOT struck in 1788. The date of issue is on the front of the coin. It's 25 cents.
The US Mint did not start minting quarter dollars until 1796.
The coin was NOT made in 1788, just look at the other date on the same side of the coin. Value is 25 cents.
1788 is the year South Carolina officially became a state. The quarter itself was actually minted in 2000, and is worth 25 cents.
All of the state quarters in circulation are face value only.
The coin was NOT struck in 1788 but in 1999, spend it.
It depends where it's from, and what condition it's in.
No US quarters of that date first year was 1796
Given that the U.S. Mint didn't begin production of coins until 1793, what you have is a modern state quarter for Georgia, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maryland, South Carolina, New Hampshire, Virginia, or New York, all of which became states in 1788. The coin is worth 25 cents.