2021 George Washington Crossing the Delaware Quarter Images Unveiled

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The United States Mint officially revealed which design will appear on quarter reverses (tails side) beginning in 2021. The U.S. Mint also published images of 2021 quarters bearing the design.

2021 General George Washington Crossing the Delaware Quarter - obverse and reverse
Images of the obverse and reverse of a 2021 General George Washington Crossing the Delaware Quarter

Depicting General George Washington crossing an ice-choked Delaware River in 1776 prior to the Battle of Trenton, the new quarters will be released into circulation beginning April 5, 2021.

They will mark a closure to the Mint’s America the Beautiful Quarters® Program. The program, which debuted in 2010 and features changing reverses honoring national parks and other national sites in each state, the District of Columbia and the five U.S. territories, ends with the coin honoring Alabama’s Tuskegee Airmen National Historic Site. The Tuskegee Airmen quarter will start circulating Feb. 1, 2021.

Public Law 110-456 directs usage of a crossing the Delaware image upon the completion of the America the Beautiful program. Seventeen candidates were reviewed.

George Washington Crossing the Delaware River Quarter, Designs 1-4
Shown: Four of the 17 candidates that were considered for the quarter’s revese design

The final design was selected by the Treasury Secretary after consulting with the Commission of Fine Arts (CFA) and the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee (CCAC).

2021 General George Washington Crossing the Delaware Quarter - reverse
A larger image showing the quarter’s reverse design

Created by Benjamin Sowards and sculpted by Michael Gaudioso, the image shows General Washington commanding his troops through the overnight crossing of the ice-choked Delaware River prior to the Battle of Trenton during the American Revolutionary War. Inscriptions include "UNITED STATES OF AMERICA," "E PLURIBUS UNUM," "CROSSING THE DELAWARE," and "QUARTER DOLLAR."

The reverse will be paired with John Flanagan’s portrait of President Washington. The original portrait was introduced on quarter obverses in 1932. Specifically, Public Law 110-456 mandates that the obverse revert to the same design containing the image of the President in use before the 50 State Quarters Program.

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Chris

Love the Design. Shows Washington’s strength leadership nice choice.

Michael Weil

It really is a powerfully expressive illustration of his sense of purpose and command.

Last edited 3 years ago by Michael Weil
RonnieBGood

A good design!

Bryan New

I thought an eagle had to be on the coin somewhere according to law.

Jim Longacre

That’s in the Mint Act of 1873. But the specific provision requiring Washington Crossing the Delaware to be on the coin after the conclusion of the National Parks series overrides that.

c_q

finally, a design that will last longer than a couple months.

but will it last til 2032 (100th anniversary of washington on the quarter and 300th anniversary of his birth)?

Last edited 3 years ago by c_q
Jim Longacre

Probably not. There’s a bill that has passed both houses of Congress for a famous woman (men are ineligible for some reason) from each state to appear on the reverse 2022-2025, then a US 250th in 2026 then youth sports in 2027 to 2029. It has passed each House in a slightly different form so it has to pass the House again and there’s less than a week left in the Congress, but these things seem to sneak through at the last minute.

Jim Longacre

That bill passed the House today and goes to Trump’s desk. No coin bill has been vetoed since 1954 so it probably goes through.

David S.

Isn’t it a bit redundant having Washington appearing on both the obverse and reverse? I don’t know about anyone else but I am burned out on all these commemorative quarters/multi yearly designs. I have given up on them. I just want to go back to a single regular design. For me, the Statehood/Territory quarters were find, but after that I was already for a regular single design but that never happened. I miss the days of a single lens proof set. Now they are bloated with stuff many have little to no interest in.

Antonio

Single design reverse for quarters is a thing of the past. 2022 to 2025, famous women. 2026, the 250th anniversary of the American Revolution. 2027 to 2032, youth sports. 2032, 300th anniversary of Washington’s birth. After that, maybe no more coins as it’ll be a cashless society. We’ll see.

Vachon

I thought we were supposed to get the 1999 NJ quarter reverse with modified wording? Either way, I’m glad that 22 years of five designs a year is finally over. Oh wow, I am so much older than I was when this all started…

Now if only the dollar coin would join the rest of our denominations and be just one thing for a while

Jake

The dollar is one thing, it’s one dollar. Value TBD. I request seth for their valuable input on such a touchy subject.

Rick

Will there be coins minted at west point of this coin as well?

Richard W.

Wondering about that too. Also curious if there will be “S” uncirculated ones sold separately. At least as Vachon said it will be a nice change from 5 a year, guess the mint and proof sets will each have 2 quarters in 2021, which will make packaging and displaying them easier. This almost seems like a run up to the 250th in 2026, though as Jim notes something else will be done then. I guess another set of special reverses on all denominations will be likely. Hope it is handled better than the 1975-6 sets which lay around for years.

Last edited 3 years ago by Richard W.
Robert W Britton

I ordered two reverse proof coins today offered by the US mint.

Joe

Prefer 01A

Jake

+1 to all good comments

Eric D Buttorff

Nice back, but change the front too, such as a facing front view simular to the nickel.

Jake

We got a comedian

Chas. Barber

I would have liked the Obv. to have the original design used in the Commem Gold coin……this is a good design a shame no 5zpucks but don’t worry they will have them for the transexual wrestler issue in 2024

Jake

Idk maybe wishful thinking like my massive reallocation litecoin investment. Well! Time will tell!

Mike Zwolinski

Beautiful reverse. A forward facing bust on the obverse would have been better like the nickel than that tired nearly 100 year old profile.

LEE

Love the design. will be highly collectible. Are there gonna be just 2 designs for 2021?

Dennis

Have they said if there will be W-Mint Quarters for any of the 2021 quarters? Will they offer an S-Mint WCD Quarter in Uncirculated through the rolls and bags?

Richard W.

No W quarters in 2021 according to the Mint. I’m hearing April 5 for this quarter but there is nothing on the Mint site today (Feb. 25). Typical of how behind they are on such information there.

Kevin Duncan

Would like to get a couple of uncirculated rolls. This will be a keeper with such limited time.

Kelley Coles

This is the first one I have seen of this. It hS alot of flaws on it.

20210513_182457.jpg
Antonio

Bummer. I got two rolls of this quarter from my bank and they’re flawless.

Noel C knoeller

Is there just the one crossing the Delaware coin being issued ?

Linda Heintz

I found a Denver’s and is beautiful but has ddo and ddr and cuds trying to find information on it!!