Please see the many, many other similar posts on this site for an explanation of how these novelty pieces are made from the halves of 2 genuine coins.
They cost about $8 in novelty shops.
It is worth nothing. You could try and take the two headed coin to a coin expert. But it is just a misprint.
Depends on how many made it into circulation and how much off center it is. Is it both sides or only one side?. Which side if only one side? What condition is the quarter in? What state?
This will be worth a minimum of 800 dollars or more. This is a rare coin and is really only worth what a dealer will pay for it or a private person on auction sites.
At minimum, it currently has $3.50 worth of silver in it. Without either seeing pictures of both sides, or a very detailed description of both sides, it's impossible to provide any meaningful estimate of value.
Zero. Please search this site for the word DOUBLE. You'll find hundreds of similar questions about these trick "coins".
Sheet metal on both sides of the vehicle mainly tastes the rear.
The New Jersey state quarter has the standard portrait of Washington on one side, and a picture of him leading the Crossing of the Delaware on the other.
I credit one of my brother's Connecticut middle school students with the following.Upon the minting of the state of Washington's commemorative quarter, Governor Chris Gregoire said that it was the first quarter with Washington on both sides.Upon hearing of this, the young student said, "That's not true. New Jersey's quarter has Washington on both sides."My brother and his student notified Gregoire of this fact but received no response.MoreMost likely you have a so-called magician's coin, a novelty item made by slicing two standard quarters in half and swapping sides. They sell for a few dollars in novelty and gift shops.
The origin of ambivalence is from the Latin ambi- 'on both sides' and valere 'be worth'.
One is a quarter. One is a nickel. This way, one (the quarter) is not a nickel. You never said that both of them weren't nickels.
The 1889 quarter which has a buffalo on it is the NORTH Dakota quarter not South Dakota. The South Dakota 1889 quarter depicts Mount Rushmore. Both quarters were released in 2006. Unless they are proof they are worth 25 cents.