# 746 - 21st Century Type Set - Part 17

in LeoFinance6 years ago

A 21st-century type coin set consists of one coin bearing each design produced by the United States Mint during the 21st century. That is an enormous number of coins (commemoratives, state quarters, ATB quarters, Sacagawea dollars, etc) in both circulated/uncirculated and proof finishes. We must not forget the material of the coins like clad, silver, gold, copper, platinum, etc.

The NGC type coin registry takes the one type coin for the series approach. Therefore that is only one State Quarter, one America the Beautiful Quarter, one Sacagawea Dollar and one Presidential Dollar required. They only consider coins that were meant for circulation, so no commemoratives and no gold or platinum coins.

I decided to collect a NGC-like 21st century type coin set but, looking always for perfection, my collection is made only by PR-70 coins.

Let's show it, in order of value and year of each coin.

The seventeenth is a PR-70 UC 2009-S Clad "District of Columbia" D.C. & U.S. Territories Quarter.

It was made of 91.67% copper 8.33% nickel and weights 5.67g.

The info below comes from https://www.statequarterguide.com/2009-dc-us-territories-quarter-program/

"Following the conclusion of the 50 State Quarters Program, a second one year follow up series was authorized known as The District of Columbia and United States Territories Quarter Program. This separate program featured six additional quarters with designs representing the six U.S. jurisdictions which are not classified as states."

NGC graded 4,158 2009-S Clad "District of Columbia" Proofs, with 2,531 as PF-70 UC. 2,113,478 Clad "District of Columbia" coins were minted in San Francisco in 2009.

I bought this coin in 2013 for $8.33 and today's price is around $39.00.

"The reverse design features a depiction of famous jazz musician Duke Ellington, who was born and raised in Washington DC. The design selection process caused some controversy since all of the preliminary designs submitted contained the inscription, “Taxation Without Representation.” This motto refers to the fact that residents of the District of Columbia pay federal taxes but do not have full representation in Congress. The US Mint rejected the inscription on the basis that controversial inscriptions may not be included on coins. The inscription “Justice For All” is used in place of the controversial statement.
The reverse was designed by Joel Iskowitz and sculpted by Don Everhart."

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The obverse of each State Quarter bears a consistent design featuring a portrait of George Washington. The design is similar to the prior design of the Washington Quarter series.

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Thank you for reading. Please comment, upvote, resteem and advise me.

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Posted via Steemleo

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Eu não sabia que Duke Ellington tinha saido numa moeda americana.

Parabéns, seu post foi selecionado pelo projeto Brazilian Power, cuja meta é incentivar a criação de mais conteúdo de qualidade, conectando a comunidade brasileira e melhorando as recompensas, obrigado!

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It's about time I start finding everyone, well not everyone yet.

OKAY, I found you! So you post using the LeoFinance front end? I better start doing that too! I have it on my tag. Perhaps I can try doing it right now!

Awesome District of Columbia my friend!! @ronaldoavelino where did you post this from, and how did you re-post to the other blockchain?

I saw you replied to me I couldn't answer you....I DM you about it my friend!!!😀