more collectors? hahahaha I don't think so. dying hobby. sorry to say it but the youth can't stand this stuff. would rather buy satanic Nike's and disposable vapes. washington quarters are nothing like morgans to collect, sorry to say.
Wish I could do photos...would show a nice Type-B reverse example...maybe someone will do a nice photo of one (saw a graded example among others in one of the photos but no reverse side and too far away/small to see, anyway). Frequently the Type-B is overlooked, as many folks aren't familiar with it or in a hurry and forget to check...even dealers sometimes...so when you see a nice, regular/business-strike 56-64 P for sale...not denoting a Type-B reverse...at a good price, check out the reverse...you might find an extra deal with it .
This is the one I found in circulation, got it from a quarter change machine, so it only cost me a quarter . Most favorite coin in my "collection" so far.
My second most favorite that I also got from the same quarter change machine within a month or two of getting the bicentennial quarter.
Here's one I picked up in my change at the local gas station one morning a few months back on my drive to work when I stopped for some coffee. Someone's obviously not appreciating these proofs, unlike me who does. They're putting them into circulation.
Well no one can say that for sure. For all we know one day the world will move to purely digital money and people will look back fondly at the days of bills & coins and it might inspire more people in the future to become collectors.
Belated reply...sorry. I'm pretty sure the Expat is a proof...not a regular/business strike. All proofs are Type B reverses...that's why they call it (on some 56-64-P business strikes) the "proof reverse" as proof dies were used.