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1893 Silver Isabella Quarter Commemorative Coin X.F. 25c US Coin

$ 131.44

Availability: 90 in stock
  • Composition: Silver
  • Year: 1893
  • Denomination: 25C
  • Grade: Ungraded
  • Modified Item: No
  • Certification: Uncertified
  • Features: Commemorative
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Strike Type: Business
  • Condition: Almost Uncirculated, Rare coin
  • Mint Location: Philadelphia
  • Circulated/Uncirculated: Circulated

    Description

    1893 Silver Isabella Quarter Commemorative coin
    25c US Type Coin
    We grade this coin as X.F., but please decide for yourself
    The coin pictured is the coin you will receive
    Coin Specifications
    Category: Silver Commemoratives (1892-1954)
    Mint: Philadelphia
    Mintage: 24,191
    Obverse Designer: Charles E. Barber
    Reverse Designer: Charles E. Barber
    Composition: Silver
    Fineness: 0.9000
    Weight: 6.25g
    ASW: 0.1808oz
    Diameter: 24.3mm
    Edge: Reeded
    DESCRIPTION & ANALYSIS
    The 1893 Isabella Quarter was the second commemorative coin issued by the United States and was also created for the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago. The coin was produced at the insistence of a prominent woman of the Chicago social scene, Mrs. Potter Palmer, who was also on the Board of Lady Managers for the Exposition.
    This Board, which was formed with help from Susan B. Anthony, was formed to ensure there would be female voices in the planning of the fair. Mrs. Palmer suggested that ,000 of the funds appropriated to this board be issued in the form of commemorative quarters containing a female motif. After much back and forth between the Treasury Department and the board, the designs were finally chosen; a young Queen Isabella on the obverse and a woman kneeling while holding a distaff on the reverse. This coin was to be the first issued by the United States to depict a foreign Monarch.
    Unfortunately for the ladies, the Columbian Exposition Half Dollar featuring Christopher Columbus on the obverse and the Santa Maria on the reverse, took much of the wind out of the sales of the Isabella quarter. The price undoubtedly didn’t help, as the quarter cost a dollar, the same as the Columbian half dollar. While the maximum mintage of 40,000 was struck, 15,809 were melted, for a total mintage of 24,191 not including assay pieces. This low mintage (only 1.6% of the number of commemorative halves distributed) accounts for the coins’ scarcity today.