The 50 State Quarters program, authorized by Congress in 1997, committed the Mint to releasing five new reverse designs per year for a decade — a production schedule with no peacetime precedent in American coinage. Massachusetts was the sixth state admitted to the Union and the sixth coin released in 2000, maintaining the program's strict chronological sequencing.
Proof silver strikes were produced exclusively at San Francisco. The .900 silver composition was reserved for collector sets only; circulation strikes used the standard copper-nickel clad planchet throughout the program's run.
The 50 State Quarters program, authorized by Congress in 1997, committed the Mint to releasing five new reverse designs per year for a decade — a production schedule with no peacetime precedent in American coinage. Massachusetts was the sixth state admitted to the Union and the sixth coin released in 2000, maintaining the program's strict chronological sequencing.
Proof silver strikes were produced exclusively at San Francisco. The .900 silver composition was reserved for collector sets only; circulation strikes used the standard copper-nickel clad planchet throughout the program's run.