Not gold, gold-plated. The Mint has never made gold quarters.
A lot of companies plate coins and sell them at inflated prices as "collectibles". There's not very much of a second-level market for them so resale values are low to non-existent.
If you mean a quarter from the decade of the 1970s, the answer is no.
If you meant to type "1970-S", the S indicates the quarter was made in San Francisco. Because the only 1970 quarters struck there were proof coins, it would be worth a couple of dollars in its original packaging. If it was removed and spent, that unfortunately destroyed most or all of its value to a collector.
If you got it from change, no. If it has the mintmark "S" it's worth more than 25 cents.
if the Canadian Centennial Quarter was made within the timeline of 1873-1973 it is still only worth 25 cents.
No mint mark means it was minted in Philadelphia. The quarter is worth exactly 25 cents.
25 cents.
25 cents.
A 1973 Lincoln penny if in okay condition is worth about 15 cents in perfect condition around 35 cents.My sources are i found the same penny
A 1973 Lincoln penny if in okay condition is worth about 15 cents in perfect condition around 35 cents.My sources are i found the same penny
It's still worth 10 cents in Canada.
50 cents.
This date is still found in circulation, contains no silver and is only face value.
25 cents, assuming you found it in change and there's nothing that makes it different from any of the roughly 580,000,000 other quarters made that year.A nice uncirculated one might sell for all of 60 cents, while a proof coin with an S mint mark would be worth about $2.25-35 cents in circulated condition
25 cents. It's normally called a Washington quarter. Check your pocket change - ALL American coins carry the word Liberty so that's not anything special.
It's still worth 5 cents.