Philadelphia did not begin using the P mint mark on quarters until 1980, so the answer is that all 176,212,000 quarters minted there do not carry a mint mark. It's possible you can't find one in circulation depending on where you live. Various examinations of mint mark distributions throughout the U.S. have shown surprisingly little "mixing" even years after a particular date is issued. Banks in the west most get Denver coins and banks in the east are given Philadelphia coins. The only way they move from one area to another is in the peoples' pockets. Since most travellers no longer carry a lot of money but use credit cards instead, coins tend to remain in the regions where they were first distributed.
It was minted in Philadelphia. Philadelphia quarters dated 1979 and earlier do not have a mint mark.
A "D" means that the penny was minted in Denver An "S" means that the penny was minted in San Francisco (note - only proof cents are now minted there) A penny without a mint mark was minted in Philadelphia
Mintage data for 2010 circulating quarters is 347,000,000
oh, 408,000.
If it has no mint mark or a letter P, it's minted in Philadelphia. If it has a D, it's from Denver.
In 1906 there were 8,992,435 quarters minted. Philadelphia minted........... 3,656,435 Denver minted ...................3,280,000 New Orleans minted.......... 2,056,000
Where minted- Philadelphia or Denver.
Sorry no quarters were minted in Delaware. All state quarters were minted in Philadelphia, Denver and San Francisco.
It was minted in Philadelphia. Philadelphia quarters dated 1979 and earlier do not have a mint mark.
No. Over 800 million were minted (combined) at Philadelphia and Denver.
No state quarters minted in either Philadelphia or Denver contain silver.
Many U.S. coins have a mint mark to show where it was minted. On modern quarters, the mark is just to the right of Washington's hair ribbon. P stands for Philadelphia, D is Denver, S is San Francisco, and on older quarters there is O for New Orleans. On quarters minted before 1980, there was no mint mark for Philadelphia. For silver Washington quarters dated 1964 and earlier, Barber quarters, and Seated Liberty quarters, the mark is on the back just below the eagle. Then with Standing Liberty quarters, the mark is on the front, just above and to the left of the date.
All 3 Mints struck quarters in 1944: Philadelphia 104,956,00/ Denver 14,600,800/ San Francisco 12,560,000 = a lot of coins.
the d quarters were minted in Denver, the p's were minted in Philiadelphia.
No. The coins sold by the mint in proof sets are minted in San Francisco.
Circulation quarters are minted at 2 mints:> Philadelphia (P mint mark to the right of the bow in Washington's wig on coins dated 1980 or later, no mint mark before that) > Denver (D mint mark next to the bow from 1968 to the present, below the wreath on the back up to 1964 Proof quarters are minted for collectors at the San Francisco Mint (S)At present, all US coins used for everyday spending are minted in both Philadelphia and Denver. Meanwhile, San Francisco mints proof and collector coins.
US Quarters minted in 1954 bear both the mint mark of San Francisco, California mint "S" and the mint mark of the Denver, Colorado mint "D". Additionally, the US Mint at Philadelphia, Pensylvania also struck these quarters but no mint mark was used.