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
None. It is one of the few years that has no quarters that were minted. The Standing Liberty Quarter stopped being minted in 1930 and the familiar Washington quarter wouldn't be minted until 1932.
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 US Mint in Philadelphia struck .............613,792,000 quarters in 1990. The US Mint in Denver struck .....................927,638,181 quarters in 1990. The US Mint in San Francisco struck ...............3,299,559 proof quarters in 1990. Total number of quarters struck in 1990: ..930,938,353
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
Mintage data for 2010 circulating quarters is 347,000,000
None. It is one of the few years that has no quarters that were minted. The Standing Liberty Quarter stopped being minted in 1930 and the familiar Washington quarter wouldn't be minted until 1932.
oh, 408,000.
Quarters minted after 1965 weigh 5.67 grams each. Grab your calculator and go from there.
None.
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.
There were 14,000 1973 Isle of Man gold "uncirculated" Half-Sovereigns minted. There were 1,250 1973 Isle of Man "Proof" gold Half-Sovereigns minted.
In 1983, approximately 1.2 billion quarters were minted. This total includes coins produced at the Philadelphia and Denver mints, with the Philadelphia mint producing about 700 million and the Denver mint about 500 million. These figures reflect the high demand for quarters during that time.
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 US Mint in Philadelphia struck .............613,792,000 quarters in 1990. The US Mint in Denver struck .....................927,638,181 quarters in 1990. The US Mint in San Francisco struck ...............3,299,559 proof quarters in 1990. Total number of quarters struck in 1990: ..930,938,353
25 cents. 1965 was the first year of issue with the copper-nickel composition that current quarters have. In 1965 many, many, many quarters were minted and so it isn't a rare year. If you look hard enough, you can find many 1965 quarters in pocket change.