All error coins need to be seen. Take it to a coin dealer for an idea of value.
Georgia
All error coins need to be seen. Take it to a coin dealer for an idea of value.
25 cents.
The correct spelling is Georgia. Georgia is both a country and also a US state.
Georgia- Peach
State quarter lamination errors retail for about $10.
It's just a state quarter that has been gold plated and it has no collectible value at all, unless you find someone that wants it.
25 cents unless it is in original mint packaging.
The spelling is "Georgian" (a native of Georgia, or the British era, 1711-1830).
....25 cents just like any other post-1965 non-proof quarter. State quarters are not rare or valuable unless they are proof or have some error.
The Connecticut quarter has the Charter Oak, which is the state tree. It's a white oak [Quercus alba], as is the state tree of Maryland. The tree on the Georgia quarter is the state tree, the Live Oak [Quercus virginiana].
If the cladding has come off and the coin is thinner than a normal quarter, it's called a lamination error. That happens when the bond between the copper core and the cupronickel cladding fails. This error can retail for $10-12. However if the coin is the same thickness as a regular quarter it's NOT a lamination error because it still has full cladding. The color change is the result of being plated with some other metal for use in jewelry, or exposure to heat/chemicals. In this case it's considered to be an altered coin and has no extra value.