It's not clear what you mean. Please post a new question with a description of why you suspect the coins are misstruck.(*)
(*) Coins are said to be struck or minted, not printed. Dollar bills are printed.
The name of the state is Connecticut, just like it's spelled on the coin.
The denomination of the coin is quarter, just like it's spelled on the coin.
Please be careful about typos because it is very difficult for answerers to find questions that are spelled incorrectly.
In 1867 there were many more denominations of coins than today. Denominations minted that year were:1¢ (minted in bronze)2¢ (minted in bronze)3¢ (minted in both silver and copper-nickel)5¢ (half-dimes, minted in silver)5¢ (minted in copper-nickel)10¢ (dime, silver)25¢ (quarter, silver)50¢ (half, silver)$1.00 (minted as both large silver coins and small gold coins)$2.50 (quarter eagle, gold)$3.00 (gold)$5.00 (half eagle, gold)$10.00 (eagle, gold)$20.00 (double eagle, gold)
No specific states had quarters minted in 1796. In 1796, the only quarter issued was the Quarter Dollar Draped Bust Small Eagle. The "States" series of quarters were not minted until 1999 and ran until 2008.
If there is a S under the eagle on the reverse was struck in San Francisco if no S Philadelphia
In 1913, the U.S. minted cents, nickels, dimes, quarters, and half dollars, as well as the gold quarter, half, and double eagle.
The 1861 Quarter Eagle was struck at the Philadelphia Mint and the San Francisco Mint.
That's called a Standing Liberty quarter. They were minted 1916-1930.
In 1867 there were many more denominations of coins than today. Denominations minted that year were:1¢ (minted in bronze)2¢ (minted in bronze)3¢ (minted in both silver and copper-nickel)5¢ (half-dimes, minted in silver)5¢ (minted in copper-nickel)10¢ (dime, silver)25¢ (quarter, silver)50¢ (half, silver)$1.00 (minted as both large silver coins and small gold coins)$2.50 (quarter eagle, gold)$3.00 (gold)$5.00 (half eagle, gold)$10.00 (eagle, gold)$20.00 (double eagle, gold)
No specific states had quarters minted in 1796. In 1796, the only quarter issued was the Quarter Dollar Draped Bust Small Eagle. The "States" series of quarters were not minted until 1999 and ran until 2008.
If there is a S under the eagle on the reverse was struck in San Francisco if no S Philadelphia
In 1913, the U.S. minted cents, nickels, dimes, quarters, and half dollars, as well as the gold quarter, half, and double eagle.
You are referring to Standing Liberty Quarters, which were minted from 1916 to 1930.
The 1861 Quarter Eagle was struck at the Philadelphia Mint and the San Francisco Mint.
Yes. The "woman" was an image of Lady Liberty. Called a "Liberty Head", there were three denominations made. The Eagle ($10), the Half Eagle ($5), and the Quarter Eagle ($2.50)
The "S" is a mint mark indicating the quarter was minted in San Francisco. Circulating quarters were minted there up to 1954. They have the "S" on the reverse side of the coin under the eagle. Quarter coinage resumed in 1968 but only for proofs. The mint mark on these coins is on the front side near the bow in Washington's wig.
The 1917 Standing Liberty Quarter was minted with a bare breast and with a mailed breast with stars below the eagle. The modification was to cover Liberty's exposed breast. - .
The mintmark on the 1854 US quarter can be found on the reverse [tails] side of the coin beneath the eagle. The coin was minted at 2 different mints; Philadelphia and New Orleans. The letter "O" represents the New Orleans mint. The coins minted at Philadelphia do not have a mintmark.
An eagle.