1964 is the last date for silver quarters.
To be annoyingly technical, 1964-dated silver quarters were actually struck for a while in 1965 during the transition to cupronickel coinage, but there's no way to tell them apart from coins made during calendar 1964.
They were last made in 1965. They are now made of copper and nickel. Silver quarters have a melt value of around $6.
Silver quarters were minted from 1796 to 1964. Starting in 1965, quarters were made of a copper-nickel alloy.
1964 was the last year the US produced silver quarters for circulation.
Any US quarter minted in 1964 or earlier is 90% silver.
The last year for silver quarters was 1964.
Yes. That was the first year the U.S. minted quarters out of copper instead of silver.
Silver quarters were minted from 1796 to 1964. Starting in 1965, quarters were made of a copper-nickel alloy.
1964 was the last year the US produced silver quarters for circulation.
Any US quarter minted in 1964 or earlier is 90% silver.
The last year for silver quarters was 1964.
1796 was the first year a U.S. quarter was issued.
Yes. That was the first year the U.S. minted quarters out of copper instead of silver.
No US dollar coins were struck in 1949. 1935 was the last year for a US silver dollar. Silver halves were minted in 1949 along with quarters and dimes.
No. The last year for silver dimes and quarters was 1964.
No. All circulating quarters dated 1965 and later are made of copper-nickel. The only silver quarters minted since 1965 were special coins struck for sale to collectors: 40% silver Bicentennial quarters minted in 1975 and 1976, and "Prestige" proofs minted 1992-present.
1964 was the last year US quarters were made of Silver.
The last circulating silver quarters were dated 1964. Special proof-quality 40% silver quarters were minted in 1976, and 90% silver quarters have been made since 1992 but all of these are sold to collectors. None were ever intentionally put into circulation. Real silver? As opposed to fake silver?
1964.