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US Mint

¼ Dollar – United States

Circulating commemorative coins
Commemoration: United States Mint's District of Columbia and United States Territories Quarters® Program
United States
Context
Year: 2009
Issuer: United States Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1776)
Currency:
(since 1785)
Subdivision: ¼ Dollar = 25 Cents
Total mintage: 141,113,478
Material
Diameter: 24.26 mm
Weight: 5.67 g
Thickness: 1.75 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Copper (Nickel-clad Copper)
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard446
Numista: #6624
Value
Exchange value: ¼ USD = $0.25
Inflation-adjusted value: 0.37 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 D

JF WC

QUARTER DOLLAR
Script: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Sea view from an Old San Juan sentry box.
Inscription:
PUERTO RICO

Isla

del

Encanto

JFM

E PLURIBUS UNUM 2009
Script: Latin
Engraver: Joseph Menna

Edge

Reeded


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
2009D86,000,000
2009P53,000,000
2009S2,113,478Proof

Historical background

The United States entered 2009 in the throes of the Great Recession, a period defined by a severe financial crisis and deep economic contraction. The currency situation was paradoxical: the U.S. dollar experienced a sharp and unexpected surge in value as a global "safe-haven" asset, despite the crisis originating within the American financial system. As global investors fled risky assets and foreign markets, they sought the perceived security of U.S. Treasury bonds, driving demand for dollars and causing it to appreciate significantly against most other major currencies in late 2008 and into early 2009. This "flight to quality" underscored the dollar's enduring role as the world's primary reserve currency, even amid domestic turmoil.

Domestically, the Federal Reserve embarked on an unprecedented monetary policy response known as Quantitative Easing (QE). With conventional interest rates already near zero, the Fed began creating new money to purchase massive quantities of mortgage-backed securities and Treasury bonds. This aimed to inject liquidity into the frozen financial system, lower long-term borrowing costs, and stimulate economic activity. While not directly devaluing the currency, these actions expanded the money supply dramatically, leading to concerns among some economists about long-term inflationary pressures and the potential debasement of the dollar's value.

By the second half of 2009, as extreme panic subsided and tentative signs of global stabilization emerged, the dollar's safe-haven rally began to reverse. Investors started moving capital back into higher-yielding assets and currencies, leading to a broad dollar depreciation. This shift was tacitly welcomed by U.S. authorities, as a weaker dollar helped boost American exports by making them more competitively priced abroad, supporting a key avenue for economic recovery. Thus, the year encapsulated a full cycle for the dollar—from crisis-driven strength to policy-induced weakness—all set against a backdrop of profound economic uncertainty and transformative central bank intervention.

Series: United States Mint's District of Columbia and United States Territories Quarters Program

¼ Dollar obverse
¼ Dollar reverse
¼ Dollar
2009
¼ Dollar obverse
¼ Dollar reverse
¼ Dollar
2009
¼ Dollar obverse
¼ Dollar reverse
¼ Dollar
2009
¼ Dollar obverse
¼ Dollar reverse
¼ Dollar
2009
¼ Dollar obverse
¼ Dollar reverse
¼ Dollar
2009
¼ Dollar obverse
¼ Dollar reverse
¼ Dollar
2009
¼ Dollar obverse
¼ Dollar reverse
¼ Dollar
2009
🌱 Very Common