- 50 State Quarters designs
The following is a list of the fifty United States quarter
coin designs for the50 State Quarters program.List of designs
tates (1999-2008)
"Quarter-dollar coin images from the United States Mint."
District of Columbia and territories (2009)
Design elements
tars
Several quarters have stars as part of their design. On the designs for New Hampshire, New York, Indiana, and Illinois, the stars represent the order in which the state either ratified the Constitution (New Hampshire and New York) or was admitted as a state (Indiana and Illinois). For example, New Hampshire has nine stars, as it is the ninth state. The three stars in the background of Tennessee's design symbolize the three Grand Divisions of the state;
East Tennessee ,Middle Tennessee , andWest Tennessee , and not the state's entry number (as Tennessee was the sixteenth state to be admitted to the Union).Texas has a star representing its title as the "Lone Star State", andAlaska has a star representing theNorth Star , a symbol of "the future state of Alaska, the most northerly in the union".Additional notes on individual designs
*Alabama: The Alabama state quarter is the first coin circulated in the U.S. that features
Braille writing. It also is the first coin circulated in the U.S. featuring a member of the Socialist Party.*Arizona: The banner reading "Grand Canyon State" in the design is intended to split the quarter into two sections and indicate the Grand Canyon and the saguaro cactus are in two different Arizona scenes, as the saguaro cactus is not found near the Grand Canyon. [cite web|url=http://www.azgovernor.gov/azquarter/QPoll.asp|title=Arizona State Quarter|accessdate=2008-05-16|work=Governor of Arizona (official site)]
*Colorado: William Eugene Rollins designed the quarter in a contest held in 2005. The quarter shows the landscape of Colorado's nature side with a mountain and pine trees.
*Connecticut: The
Charter Oak on the back of the Connecticut quarter fell during a storm onAugust 21 ,1856 . It also appears on a 1936 half dollar commemorating the 300th anniversary of the state's settlement by Europeans.*District of Columbia: The Mint rejected some of the design narratives that the District government submitted because the Mint deemed controversial the motto "Taxation Without Representation". [ [http://dcist.com/2008/02/27/breaking_us_min.php DCist: BREAKING: U.S. Mint Rejects D.C. Quarter Design ] ]
*Georgia: an apparent mistake in the outline of the state of Georgia on the quarter appears to have accidentally left out Dade County, which is in the extreme northwestern part of the state.
*Hawaii: The Hawaii quarter features a rendition of the statue of
Kamehameha I , who united the Hawaiian Islands in 1810, with the state outline and motto. This is the only royalty to appear on US currency.*Illinois: The Illinois quarter is the only quarter to directly reference and portray an urban city, with a picture of the
Chicago skyline . It is also the first coin to feature George Washington and Abraham Lincoln on the same coin.*Indiana: The Indiana quarter — having a problem similar to Georgia's quarter — is missing part of its northwestern corner. Lake County is either partially or completely missing (where it borders with
Lake Michigan ). The error did not garner considerable notice.*Iowa: When Iowans were debating the design for its state quarter in 2002, there was a grassroots effort to use a design featuring the
Sullivan brothers (to honor the five Waterloo siblings who died when the ship they were aboard — theUSS Juneau (CL-52) — sank during theNaval Battle of Guadalcanal , 1942). The effort was ultimately unsuccessful, and aGrant Wood design was used, but not before some copyright issues were resolved.cite web |url=http://www.qctimes.net/articles/2002/07/20/afternoon_edition/export38782.txt |title=Quarter design will not be put up for a vote |accessdate=2007-02-03 |format= |work=Quad City Times |date=2002-07-20] [cite web |url=http://www.qctimes.net/articles/2002/08/23/morning_edition/export41037.txt |title=Grant Wood dominates field |accessdate=2007-02-03 |format= |work=Quad City Times |date=2002-08-23]*Minnesota: Many safety groupsFact|date=December 2007 are pointing out the fact that on the state quarter, the men fishing from the boat are not wearing life jackets.
*Missouri: A design contest winner for the Missouri quarter, Paul Jackson, has claimed that the Mint
engraver needlessly redesigned Jackson's original design. The Mint stated that Jackson's design was not coinable, but a private mint later demonstrated that it was. It emerged that Mint engravers hold a monopoly on the design of U.S. coinage, and the term "design contest" was dropped from solicitations for ideas for later state quarters.cite web |url=http://www.pauljackson.com/Quartergate.pdf |title=Quartergate |accessdate=2007-02-03 |format=PDF |work= ] cite web |url=http://www.scvhistory.com/scvhistory/signal/coins/worden-coinage1205a.htm |title=50-State Quarters: Credit Where Credit Is Due |publisher=Santa Clarita Valley Historical Society | accessdate=2007-02-03 |format= |work= ]*Nebraska: One of the final concepts for the Nebraska quarter was based on the
Ponca leaderStanding Bear , who, in a suit brought against the federal government, successfully argued that Native Americans were citizens entitled to rights under the U.S. Constitution.*New Hampshire: The
Old Man of the Mountain , featured on the back of the New Hampshire quarter, collapsed in 2003.*Oregon: Oregon's design features a scene of
Crater Lake andWizard Island . This design was chosen by the Oregon Commemorative Quarter Commission. The Quarter Commission was made up of 18 members, includingGovernor Ted Kulongoski ,State Treasurer Randall Edwards,Columbia Sportswear ChairpersonGert Boyle , numismatist Monte Mensing,Beaverton High School student Laura Davis, along with state congresspersons Charles Starr, Joan Dukes, Betsy Johnson, and Betsy Close, among others. The Quarter Commission chose theCrater Lake design from three other finalists: a jumping salmon, theOregon Trail , andMt. Hood .*South Dakota: Although South Dakota has the second highest proportion of American Indians of any state, the South Dakota quarter features three items that are the result of European settlement. These symbols are Mount Rushmore, which is carved into the
Black Hills which are seen as sacred by the Lakota, apheasant (anexotic species ), andwheat , which has replaced tens of thousands of square miles of diversegrassland s.*Tennessee: There has also been some controversy over the Tennessee quarter. Some sources claim that the details on the instruments depicted on the quarter are inaccurate, such as the number of strings on the guitar and the location of the tubing on the trumpet.
*West Virginia: During the submission process for the design of the West Virginia quarter, there was an apparent movement to put the famous
Mothman on the final design.Fact|date=February 2007*Wisconsin: A number of the Wisconsin quarters featured a small mint error: the ear of
corn features an extra leaf. Some of the affected coins feature a "low leaf", others feature a "high leaf". All of these "error coins" were minted at theDenver mint. It is unclear whether the error was deliberate or accidental, but the error has sparked a collector frenzy. Sets of the flawed coins have been sold oneBay for up to $2800.cite web |url=http://www.usatoday.com/money/2005-02-10-quarter-usat_x.htm |title=Coin collectors flip, rumors fly after quarters sprout extra leaf |accessdate=2007-02-03 |format= |work=USA Today |date=2005-02-10] cite web |url=http://www.usatoday.com/money/2006-01-20-quarter-goof-usat_x.htm |title=State quarter's extra leaf grew out of lunch break |accessdate=2007-02-03 |format= |work=USA Today |date=2006-01-20]*Wyoming: Some Wyoming quarters were released in 2007 with indications of inadequate quality control. Many persons, upon first seeing the same cowboy outline design used on the state's automobile license plates, have mistakently believed that the lack of detail is itself a flaw, the result of an incomplete striking. However, evidence of cracks in the die and subsequent hasty repairs have been observed in a few circulation specimens.
Notes
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