US Quarter 2001 Kentucky State coin value
The image of this coin is simply an example of US Quarter 2001 Kentucky State type coinage.
Cost approximate and applicable to regular coin only.
I do not buy or sell coins - this is just a catalog.
Currency - Dollar=100 cents
Face value: Quarter dollar ($1/4=25 cents)
Type - commemorative coin
50 States Quarters Series
Composition - copper-nickel clad copper
Diameter - 24.3 mm
Weight - 5.67 grams
Edge: Reeded
Mint Mark: D (Denver), P (Philadelphia)

Years of mintage:
2001
Reverse:
Thoroughbred racehorse behind fence, Bardstown mansion, Federal Hill
Legend:
KENTUCKY 1792 / MY OLD KENTUCKY HOME / 2001 E PLURIBUS UNUM
Obverse:
Washington facing left
Legend:
QUARTER DOLLAR / UNITED STATES OF AMERICA / LIBERTY / IN GOD WE TRUST
Krause catalog number - KM#322
Coin value in condition:
UNC (Uncirculated - without traces of circulation) - ~1 USD.00
XF (Extremely Fine) - 0.25-0.50
Worse than "XF" - 0.25 USD
KENTUCKY #15
Capital: Frankfort.Adhered to: June 1, 1792.
Population: 4,092,891 hab.
Origin of the name: Its origin comes from the Iroquian Indian words "KAN-TAH-TEN" which means "The Land of Tomorrow".
Reverse Shows the "Federal Hill" mansion on a hill, with the legends "MY OLD KENTUCKY HOME". In the foreground is a thoroughbred horse behind a fence. Above is the accession date of the State to the Union.

KM#(D):322KM#(S):322a
"The Federal Hill" is an old
Georgian-style mansion located in the city of Bardstwon, Kentucky, it is famous
because it is believed that Stephen Foster was inspired there to create the
well-known ballad "My Old Kentucky Home", anthem of the State from the beginning
of the 20th century, although there are those who believe that this song was
plagiarized from the black slaves who sang it on the farm's cotton plantations.
The State is also famous for horse
racing, the Kentucky Derby is known as the longest horse race in the country.
Kentucky, since the beginning of the 18th century, has been the largest thoroughbred horse breeding and racing center in the country, there they breed a thoroughbred breed that is highly appreciated in the world of racing worldwide, due to the special characteristics that the horse has. grass in the area.
This is one of the reasons why the figure of a thoroughbred appears on the reverse of the coin.

Federal Hill
Stephen Foster
kentucky derby