View All Seated Liberty Quarters 1838-1891

1863 Seated Liberty Quarter

Base
1863 Quarter coin

About This Coin

The 1863 Seated Liberty Quarter is a United States quarter from the Seated Liberty Quarters 1838-1891 series — 26th of 54 years in the series. In 1863, coins were struck at the Philadelphia Mint with a combined mintage of 192,060. This ranks 21st of 54 years by total mintage, below the series median of 500,580. The obverse features Liberty seated on a rock, holding a pole surmounted by a Phrygian liberty cap in her left hand and a shield inscribed LIBERTY in her right and the reverse displays a heraldic eagle with shield on breast, olive branch and arrows in talons, with a banner reading E PLURIBUS UNUM. Produced during the Civil War, when coin hoarding caused severe shortages and the Mint experimented with new compositions to keep coins in circulation. Struck in 90% silver, 10% copper, weighing 6.2 grams, 24.3 mm in diameter, with a reeded edge. Across its variants, estimated values range from $92 to $1.7K depending on mint mark, grade, and strike type. A notable auction result reached $21K in PR66 grade at Legend Rare Coin Auctions. Designed by Robert Ball Hughes/Christian Gobrecht.

Value Estimates

$92 - $1,686

Values as of May 2026 — range across all strike types, reflecting typical grades (G-4 through MS-63). Coins in lower or exceptional grades may fall outside this range.

Specifications

Year
1863
Denomination
Quarter
Series
Seated Liberty Quarters 1838-1891
Weight
6.2g
Diameter
24.3mm
Designer
Robert Ball Hughes/Christian Gobrecht
Edge
Reeded

Strike Types & Varieties(2)

Showing all 2 listings