Bicentennial Coinage
The Bicentennial Coinage Program was introduced in 1975. The Quarter, Half Dollar, and Dollar were all changed to include the dual date 1776-1976 and the reverse designs were also changed. These coins were struck in 1975 and 1976 which explains why no 1975 dated Quarters, Halves, or Dollars exist.
These coins are all very common, with hundreds of millions of each piece struck. With this in mind it is safe to say that you can spend your bicentennial coinage. - http://coins.ha.com/common/questions.php#Bicentennial_Coinage
If it is in circulated condition, 25 cents.
That’s about the most un-collectable quarter the US Mint has ever made.
The problem is that they produced them in both 1975 and 1976 - and they were all dated 1776–1976. As a result, they made about twice as many and any other year from that series, so there is no scarcity whatsoever.
Unless it was Proof or Uncirculated, it’s probably worth only face value.
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The date on it should read 1776-1976. It's a common U.S. bicentennial quarter, still worth 25 cents.
25 cents.
Please look at the coin's dual dates - 1776 to 1976 is TWO hundred years, not 100. That would make this a quarter issued for the US Bicentennial.
That indentation is damage that means the coin is only worth a quarter.
It's just a Bicentennial quarter, spend it.
The date on it should read 1776-1976. It's a common U.S. bicentennial quarter, still worth 25 cents.
1 million dollars
25 cents.
Please look at the coin's dual dates - 1776 to 1976 is TWO hundred years, not 100. That would make this a quarter issued for the US Bicentennial.
That indentation is damage that means the coin is only worth a quarter.
It's just a Bicentennial quarter, spend it.
The date is 1776-1976 and it's only a quarter.
Please check again. There are no coins with those date combinations. You presumably have a Bicentennial quarter - its dates will be 1776 - 1976.
It's a common bicentennial quarter, still worth 25 cents. Denver minted 860 million of them.
The date is 1776-1976. None of the bicentennial quarters struck general circulation have any silver or are more than face value.
The mintmark is a "D" not a "P" and it's just a quarter.
It's worth exactly 25 cents.