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1914-D
| Weight | 6.25 g |
| Diameter | 24.3 mm |
| Mint | Denver |
| Strike | Circulation strike |
| Mintage | 3,046,000 |
| Edge | Reeded |
| Alignment | ↑↓ Coin |
| Composition | 90% Silver, 10% Copper |
| Melt value | — |
| Designer | Charles E. Barber |
| Collector's Key ID | CK-2712 |
Collection
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No additional varieties recorded for this strike.
External references
The 1914-D Barber quarter, struck at the Denver Mint at 3,046,000 pieces, represented a healthy Denver delivery that more than doubled the prior year's 1913-D output and re-established the facility as a routine multi-million-piece producer of the denomination. Quarters from this issue supplied the silver-mining payrolls of Colorado, the cattle and railroad commerce of the Rocky Mountain West, and the agricultural distribution networks running from the Plains states into the Pacific Northwest. The "D" mintmark on the reverse below the eagle's tail anchors the issue to Denver, then in its ninth year of producing the denomination.
Strike characteristics on 1914-D quarters generally present competent central detail on early-die-state examples, with Liberty's hair definition above the ear and the eagle's shield horizontals typically holding up under routine die wear. Later-die-state pieces can show softening at the wreath ribbon and incompleteness at the eagle's left wing tip. The 6.25-gram weight standard in 90% silver and 10% copper, the 24.3-mm diameter, and the continuous reeded edge provide the structural specifications for genuine examples. The three-million-piece mintage left a comfortable supply of circulated survivors across the Good-through-Extremely-Fine range, with the date available for collectors assembling a routine Denver Barber quarter run. Mint State examples become scarcer above MS-63, with bag-handling marks across the obverse fields and luster suppression on Liberty's cheek serving as the principal grade limiters; gem pieces with full original surfaces command meaningful premiums but appear with sufficient regularity to support active collector demand at every grade tier.
For more on Denver Mint production through the closing years of the Barber quarter series, see the Barber Quarter series history.
Reference data only — not an appraisal.
| Grade | Description | Low | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| G-4 | Good (G) | $15 | $17.50 |
| VG-8 | Very Good (VG) | $17 | $19.50 |
| F-12 | Fine (F) | $27 | $31 |
| VF-20 | Very Fine (VF) | $44 | $50 |
| EF-40 | Extremely Fine (EF) | $60 | $69 |
| AU-50 | About Uncirculated (AU) | $103 | $119 |
| MS-60 | Uncirculated (MS) | $200 | $235 |
| MS-63 | Choice Uncirculated (MS) | $405 | $430 |
How much is a 1914-D Barber Quarter (Liberty Head) worth?
How many 1914-D Barber Quarters (Liberty Head) were minted?
What is a 1914-D Barber Quarter (Liberty Head) made of?
What is the melt value of a 1914-D Barber Quarter (Liberty Head)?
Is the 1914-D Barber Quarter (Liberty Head) a key date?
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