None of the Bicentennial coins struck for general circulation contain any silver or have more than face value. Only proof and uncirculated collectors coins sold from the Mint have premiums. The reason it has no mintmark is it was struck at the Philadelphia mint, US quarters did not use a "P" mintmark until 1980
The lack of a mint mark indicates that the coin was minted in Philadelphia. The mint mark P wasn't added to quarters until 1980.
It's worth 25 cents.
Many of the quarters are valued in price close to $50 each. The amount for each quarter will vary depending upon its condition.
a quarter
JLA is a monogram, not an acronym, and belongs to the artist Jack L. Ahr who designed the bicentennial quarter's reverse. The fact that your quarter doesn't have a mint mark simply means it was minted in Philadelphia. The P mint mark wasn't used on quarters (and most other coins) until 1980.
No mint mark means it was minted in Philadelphia. The quarter is worth exactly 25 cents.
None of the Bicentennial coins made for general circulation contain any silver or are worth more than face value. Only Proof and collectors coins sold from the US Mint are worth more.
None of the Bicentennial coins made for general circulation contain any silver or are worth more than face value. Only Proof and collectors coins sold from the US Mint are worth more.
$3.00- $2,750.00 dollars
None of the bicentennial dollars made for general circulation are worth more than face value. Only Proof and collectors coins sold from the US Mint are worth more.
Melt? $5.80. Depending on mint mark and condition it might be worth more.
None of the Washington Bicentennial quarters dollars struck for general circulation have more than face value. Only proof and uncirculated collectors coins sold from the Mint have premiums Actually, a 1776-1976 Bicentennial Quarter that has the "S" mark is 40% silver. Other coins of the 1776-1976 Bicentennial Quarter is worth nothing , just 25 cents