Colorized quarters are ordinary quarters altered by a private company and sold at an often-high premium. To a coin collector they're considered to be altered or damaged and have no extra value. Some niche-type collectors of novelty items may pay a premium for a complete set, though.
The coin is a 2001 Vermont State Quarter, it's 25 cents.
A 1765 US quarter does not exist.
The first US quarter was struck in 1796.
The first US quarter dollars were minted in 1796. 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! The minting date is at the bottom of the design on the back side. Nearly all State Quarters found in circulation have no extra value. Just a quarter, no more, no less.The US Mint did not start minting quarter dollars until 1796.The US Mint did not start minting quarter dollars until 1796.
No US quarters were struck in 1922. The US did not make ANY quarters dated 1922.
Colorized or gold plated coins are not products of the US Mint and from a numismatic point of view have no collectible value. But unfortunately this stuff does sell on web based auction sites from $85.00-$144.00 depending in the number of coins the sets have in them and what kind of fancy over priced albums they have.
The coin is a 2001 Vermont State Quarter, it's 25 cents.
A US quarter has a face value of 25 cents.
A 1765 US quarter does not exist.
25 cents. Such a coin is not a genuine mint product and therefore has little to no collector interest. It is only worth face value.
The first US quarter was struck in 1796.
Since the coin is colorized it makes it unique but this does not increase the value. It would be worth what silver is worth per ounce because these coins contain an ounce of silver. Currently silver is worth $28.83 in US currency. See the related link below for the current spot price of silver.
The first US quarter dollars were minted in 1796. 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! The minting date is at the bottom of the design on the back side. Nearly all State Quarters found in circulation have no extra value. Just a quarter, no more, no less.The US Mint did not start minting quarter dollars until 1796.The US Mint did not start minting quarter dollars until 1796.
No US quarters were struck in 1922. The US did not make ANY quarters dated 1922.
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.
No US quarters were made in 1810.
No US quarters were minted in 1817.