Logo Title
obverse
reverse
United States Mint

¼ Dollar – United States

United States
Context
Year: 2008
Issuer: United States Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1776)
Currency:
(since 1785)
Subdivision: ¼ Dollar = 25 Cents
Total mintage: 1,192,908
Material
Diameter: 24.3 mm
Weight: 6.25 g
Silver weight: 5.62 g
Thickness: 1.75 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: 90% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard423a
Numista: #14897
Value
Exchange value: ¼ USD = $0.25
Bullion value: $15.91
Inflation-adjusted value: 0.39 USD

Obverse

Description:
Left-profile portrait of George Washington with "IN GOD WE TRUST" and "LIBERTY," surrounded by the face value and "UNITED STATES OF AMERICA."
Inscription:
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

IN

GOD WE

TRUST

LIBERTY

S

QUARTER DOLLAR
Script: Latin
Engraver: John Flanagan

Reverse

Description:
The Grand Canyon with a Saguaro cactus in the foreground, separated by a "Grand Canyon State" banner to indicate the cactus does not grow there.
Inscription:
ARIZONA

1912

GRAND CANYON STATE

JFM

2008

E PLURIBUS UNUM
Translation:
ARIZONA

1912

GRAND CANYON STATE

JFM

2008

OUT OF MANY, ONE
Script: Latin
Languages: Latin, English
Engraver: Joseph Menna

Edge

Reeded

Categories

Geography> Desert


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
2008S1,192,908Proof

Historical background

The United States entered 2008 in a precarious economic position, with a housing market collapse that had begun in 2007 triggering a severe financial crisis. This created intense pressure on the U.S. dollar and the broader monetary system. As major financial institutions like Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers faced insolvency due to exposure to toxic mortgage-backed securities, credit markets froze. The Federal Reserve, led by Chairman Ben Bernanke, was forced to take unprecedented and expansive actions to provide liquidity and prevent a total systemic meltdown, dramatically altering the currency and monetary landscape.

In response to the crisis, the Federal Reserve embarked on a radical policy path known as "quantitative easing" (QE). It slashed the federal funds rate effectively to zero by December 2008 and began creating new money to purchase vast quantities of Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities. The goal was to lower long-term interest rates, stimulate borrowing, and restore confidence. This massive expansion of the Fed's balance sheet, which ballooned from under $900 billion to over $2 trillion in months, raised significant concerns about potential long-term dollar devaluation and future inflation, though these effects were largely muted in the immediate term by the powerful deflationary forces of the crisis.

Throughout this period, the U.S. dollar experienced significant volatility. Initially, it surged during the peak panic in late 2008 as investors worldwide sought the safety and liquidity of U.S. Treasury securities, a phenomenon known as a "flight to quality." However, as the Fed's aggressive money-printing measures took hold and global risk appetite tentatively returned, the dollar began a sustained decline against other major currencies through 2009. The 2008 currency situation thus set the stage for a new era of unconventional monetary policy, with the Fed actively managing the money supply in ways not seen since World War II, fundamentally reshaping the dollar's role in the global economy for years to come.

Series: United States Mint's 50 State Quarters Program

¼ Dollar obverse
¼ Dollar reverse
¼ Dollar
2007
¼ Dollar obverse
¼ Dollar reverse
¼ Dollar
2008
¼ Dollar obverse
¼ Dollar reverse
¼ Dollar
2008
¼ Dollar obverse
¼ Dollar reverse
¼ Dollar
2008
¼ Dollar obverse
¼ Dollar reverse
¼ Dollar
2008
¼ Dollar obverse
¼ Dollar reverse
¼ Dollar
2008
¼ Dollar obverse
¼ Dollar reverse
¼ Dollar
2008
🌱 Fairly Common