Not that much. Is a fake, gambling token-'Jeton'. Made in Great Britain in the early 1800's not 1788 or 1797 or whatever.
Value= £1.00-3-00, depending on place of selling
Sorry.
1788 - 1920 = -132
It became the eleventh US State in 1788.
It became the ninth state in 1788.
Virginia was admitted into the Union on June 25, 1788 becoming the 10th state to join the union.
England colonised and governed New South Wales in 1788.
There were no U.S. pennies made in 1788.
The coin was NOT made in 1788, just look at the other date on the same side of the coin. Value is 25 cents.
There were no quarter dollar coins issued by the U.S. mint in 1788.
The coin was NOT struck in 1788. The date of issue is on the front of the coin. It's 25 cents.
The coin was NOT struck in 1788 but in 1999, spend it.
10,000
A few words that rhyme with 1788EightAteHateInflateConcentrateLateGate
Too variable to answer. See a dealer.
All of the state quarters in circulation are face value only.
You are asking about a British coin dated 1788 ("Georgius 111" refers to King George the Third). You would need to give a better description of the coin (condition and denomination, or at least a physical description of the coin's size, material, design, etc.) to get any kind of an estimation of value - it could be less than a dollar or could be several thousand. Also, there were many tokens and counterfeits - mostly copper or brass - made around that time period, so your "coin" may fall into one of those categories as well.
1788 is the year South Carolina officially became a state. The quarter itself was actually minted in 2000, and is worth 25 cents.
No US quarters of that date first year was 1796