Home :: Quarter Dollar :: Statehood (1999-2008) :: 2004 Iowa Quarter

2004 Iowa Quarter

2004 Iowa Quarter
Philiadelphia Denver San Francisco
SKU
25c-2004P-IA
Weight
0.03 oz
Our price:
$0.90
Click here to be notified of price drops of this item
 
Mint / Grade
Qty
Click here to subscribe for 'Back-in-stock' notifications
The Iowa quarter is the fourth of 2004, and the 29th in the 50 State Quarters Program. On December 28, 1846, Iowa became the 29th state to be admitted into the Union. The Iowa quarter design features a one-room schoolhouse with a teacher and students planting a tree, and the inscriptions "Foundation in Education" and "Grant Wood." The design is based on "Arbor Day," a painting by Grant Wood, who was born near Anamosa, Iowa. He spent his career as a proponent of small-town values, which he celebrated in the iconic images of small-town plain folk and verdant Midwestern vistas for which he is world-renowned.

Iowans have had a commitment to education since the State's earliest days. When Iowa became a state in 1846, it already had a number of rural country schools in each of its counties. Iowa established its first high school in the 1850s, although high schools generally did not become widespread in the United States until after 1900. Private and public colleges also quickly took root in the new State.

Although Iowa has long been a leader in agriculture, the State is unique in that it is the only one whose east and west borders are completely formed by rivers - the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers.

Mintage:

Philadelphia Denver Clad Proof Silver Proof
213,800,000 251,400,000 1,789,488 1,175,934
1976 United States Mint Proof Set
$11.25
2000 Massachusetts BU Roll
$14.00
2005 West Virginia BU Roll
$14.00
1974 United States Mint Uncirculated Coin Set
$13.75
1953 Jefferson Nickel BU Roll
$26.00
1983 Roosevelt Dime
$0.75
1992 Lincoln Cent
$0.35
2015 Roosevelt Dime
$0.50
General George Washington Crossing the Delaware 2021
$0.90
Gift certificates

USAF Veteran Owned and Operated

 
The website uses cookies to allow us to better understand how the site is used. By continuing to use this site, you consent to this policy. Click to learn more.