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The top is worth 25 cents and the bottom is worth 25 cents...you want 64< Sent from my SGH-T959 using Tapatalk
Copper-Nickle clad, worth face. The quarters containing silver are 1964 and earlier. .18084 oz. of silver.
Even though they aren't .90 silver they are still interesting. Just think of the history. People held those coins that lived in the 1800's, survived WW1-Korean War, heck the great depression and the dust bowl.
They are more common than you think. I regularly find 1960s clad quarters in pocket change. If you can find one of a higher grade it is worth marginally more.
Such coins can be quite rare/valuable if in a very high grade and can be considered "Condition rarities". These early clads were generally not hoarded so relatively few ultra grade examples exist. One man's junk....
The top quarter is worth a Sam Choice soda at most Walmarts, while the bottom one will get you 15 minutes of parking downtown.
With these, you're about half way to purchasing a snickers bar. Keep collecting these to satisfy your hunger!
According to this inflation calculator, it would take $1.80 today to equal the buying power of each quarter in 1965. http://www.usinflationcalculator.com/
1965 quarters are the bane of my coin searching. I'll look through the cash drawers and guest laundry deposits at work and see an older looking quarter... I'll flip it over and for a fleeting moment get excited to see 196... then my bubble is burst by the 5. It's never a 1966, 67, 68, or 69. It's always a 65...