None of the 50 States Quarters have just a buffalo head. The closest match is the Kansas state quarter minted in 2005. If that's the coin you have and you found it in change it's only worth 25 cents, the same as almost every other state quarter in circulation.
Actually the date is 1776-1976. All quarters, halves, and dollars minted in 1975 and 1976 carried the same dual dates in honor of the Bicentennial. Please see the Related Question for more information.
Philadelphia is in Pennsylvania which is in the United States. Florida is also in the United States so you do not pass any countries. You stay in the same one. check out a map please.
All US quarters minted from 1873-1964 contain the same amount of silver. And all silver proof quarters (1992-present) contain the same amount of silver (keep in mind that coins you find in your pocket change made from 1965-present contain no silver) there was a special silver bicentennial quarter made that only contained 40% silver (keep in mind that the bicentennial quarters you find in change contain no silver) but other than that the silver level has remained constant for all silver quarters. The quarters before 1873 contained different levels of silver, but such coins are collectable and worth more than melt value.
There were two kinds of quarters minted in 1916. The common Barber Quarter or the ultra-rare Standing Liberty Quarter.Barber Quarter:Roughly between $5.50 and $310 depending on what condition it is in. This would be a Walking Liberty Quarter and it was only minted in Philadelphia and Denver during this year. The value is pretty much the same regardless of where it was minted.Standing Liberty Quarter:Worth about $3000 in good condition and $20,000+ in uncirculated condition. They only made 52,000 standing liberty quarters during that year.View the source links below to view pricing information based on coin condition, mintage statistics and more information about each of these 1916 quarters.
The US Mint produced about 34.8 billion quarters during the 10 year program. The number produced was lessened during 2003 and 2004, and there were 12 states where less than 500 million were produced. The state with the most quarters minted was Virginia.
they are both states
It's pretty obviously worth at least $0.25. If it's a US quarter, 1964 was the last year quarters contained silver, and it's worth considerably more than that. Quarters from 1965 and later are cupro-nickel, the same as quarters minted today.
they are both states
Not really. All 1965 quarters are made out of copper-nickel, the same material that all circulating quarters are made of today. Only 1964 and before quarters are silver. There were billions of 1965 quarters minted so unless yours is in a special mint set, I'd spend it, it won't be worth any more later down the line.
That is the same as adding 2 quarters to 3 quarters, which equals 5 quarters, which is the same as saying, "One and a quarter."
The same as all other ordinary state quarters from circulation* - 25 cents. (*) I'm excluding error coins such as Iowa quarters with extra leaves, and rotated-reverse Delaware quarters, because these are uncommon.
None of the 50 States Quarters have just a buffalo head. The closest match is the Kansas state quarter minted in 2005. If that's the coin you have and you found it in change it's only worth 25 cents, the same as almost every other state quarter in circulation.
The legal age of adulthood in the state of Florida is 18 years old. This is the same age in all of the United States.
No. Florida does not recognize same sex marriage. See the related question below for a list of states that do.
Yes. All US states experience the same season at the same time.
All U.S. half dollars minted in 1975 and '76 featured the bicentennial reverse and were dated 1776-1976. The same applies for quarters and dollars.