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It's just a quarter spend it.
The date on it should read 1776-1976. It's a common U.S. bicentennial quarter, still worth 25 cents.
July 24, 2009 Gold plating a coin destroys its numismatic value. The Bicentennial quarter is worth but a quarter plus the value of the bit of gold used to plate it.
Please look at the coin's dual dates - 1776 to 1976 is TWO hundred years, not 100. That would make this a quarter issued for the US Bicentennial.
Please check the back of your coin. Independence Hall was on the back of Bicentennial half dollars. Quarters showed a drummer boy.
It's just a quarter spend it.
It's just a quarter spend it.
The date on it should read 1776-1976. It's a common U.S. bicentennial quarter, still worth 25 cents.
July 24, 2009 Gold plating a coin destroys its numismatic value. The Bicentennial quarter is worth but a quarter plus the value of the bit of gold used to plate it.
Please look at the coin's dual dates - 1776 to 1976 is TWO hundred years, not 100. That would make this a quarter issued for the US Bicentennial.
Please check the back of your coin. Independence Hall was on the back of Bicentennial half dollars. Quarters showed a drummer boy.
Your coin is an ordinary Bicentennial quarter that's been "colorized" as a so-called collectible. That makes it an altered coin worth only face value.
Spend it so many were made even original rolls at auction only sell $1.00 to a $1.50 over face value.
It's probably dated 1776-1976, with a drummer boy on the back. It's worth 25 cents.
25 cents.Please take another look at your quarter. Even though it has George Washington's portrait on the front and a colonial drummer boy on the back, the date on the front is 1776-1976 so it isn't from the American Revolution. It's a Bicentennial Quarter and was minted to celebrate the 200th anniversary of independence. Huge numbers were struck so even today they don't have any extra value unless they're uncirculated.
What drummer boy? I'm a Christian and there is no drummer boy
It's a common bicentennial quarter, still worth 25 cents. Denver minted 860 million of them.