First Oklahoma quarters arrive
BY MICHAEL OVERALL and ANGEL RIGGS World Staff Writers
Tuesday, January 29, 2008
The state bird and wildflower are featured on the coins,
which will reach general circulation this week.
Ordinarily, she'd wait to find a new state
quarter in a handful of change from QuikTrip or hope to get one from a vending machine.
"That's part of the fun of collecting
them," said Marie Akins. "Never knowing
when or where you'll see one that you
don't have."
But not Monday. Not with the Oklahoma state quarter.
Enthusiasts went to BancFirst locations
statewide to be among the first collectors
to have the Oklahoma coin. Other banks
nationwide will begin distributing the
quarter this week.
"It's special because it's ours," said
Akins, one of the first people to walk out
with a roll of state quarters at the branch
near 41st Street and Yale Avenue. "Every
quarter is different, and it says something
about the place it came from. Ours says
'Oklahoma.' "
The tails side of the quarter features a
scissor-tail flycatcher zooming across a
field of Indian blanket flowers.
Oklahoma chose the design with an Internet poll last year, when the state bird
and state wildflower beat out a design that
included Ponca City's Pioneer Woman
statue.
It's the 46th coin in the series of state
quarters.
It's also the 46th in Peter
Mitchell's collection, which he
keeps in a trifold map of the
country, each coin placed on
its own state.
"When it's finished, I'm going to give the whole thing to
my grandson," who's 5, Mitchell said. "I keep picturing him
giving it to his grandson
someday."
Circulated by the millions,
the state quarters were never
intended to have more than
face value. BancFirst is "selling" rolls for $10, or 25 cents
per quarter.
But over time, complete collections could become rare,
and therefore valuable, especially if the coins haven't been
circulated, said Andrea Metcalf, branch manager of the
BancFirst near 91st Street and
Yale Avenue.
The first several customers
Monday at each BancFirst
branch received a commemorative postcard, with a freshly
minted state quarter tucked
safely inside a protective
sleeve. They likely will become a collector's item, Metcalf said.
Still, it's not about "investing" in the coins, she said.
"People just like them," she
said. "They're fun."
Receiving an early shipment
of $200,000 in quarters, BancFirst had the honor of circulating the coin early because it's
the largest state-chartered
bank in Oklahoma, Metcalf
said.
Other banks will make the
coin available as shipments arrive from the U.S. Mint.
In Oklahoma City, officials
marked the quarter's release
Monday with a ceremony at
the Oklahoma History Center.
Dan Shaver, acting deputy
director of the U.S. Mint, said
the quarter's design is "simply
stunning" and will serve as "a
lasting, nationwide tribute to
Oklahoma, its heritage and its
people."
"The Oklahoma quarter is
about to become a very popular coin," he said.
An estimated 147 million
people collect the state coins.
Roughly 500 million Oklahoma quarters will be minted
during a 10-week period,
Shaver said.
After that, they will never be
produced again.
Schoolchildren who attended the ceremonial launch received a free Oklahoma quarter, which Gov. Henry urged
them to save.
"One day you can show it to
your children and grandchildren and tell them you were
there when the Oklahoma
quarter was placed in circulation," Henry said.
Richard Chadwick, who
owns Davis' Arbuckle Coins,
helped spearhead volunteer
efforts to winnow the more
than 1,000 original suggestions made for the quarter.
He said the chosen design
is beautiful and artistic.
As the coins age and are
passed around in circulation,
the bird's tail and the flowers
might become a little
smudged, he said.
But "overall, even when the
coin is worn, you will still be
able to tell it's a scissor-tail flycatcher," he said.
To preserve the quarters,
Chadwick recommended
keeping the coins in an archive-safe protective holder
and away from ultraviolet light
and moisture. The holders can
be purchased at coin shops.
Michael Overall 581-8383
michael.overall@tulsaworld.com
Angel Riggs (405) 528-2465
angel.riggs@tulsaworld.com
COIN SPECIFICATIONS
Standard weight: 5.67 0
grams
Standard diameter: 0.95 5
inches (24.26 mm)
Thickness: 1.75 mm
Composition: Cupronickel
clad (8.33 percent nickel; balance
copper)
Edges: Reeded
Associated Images:

BancFirst employee Stephanie Reese (right) hands out new Oklahoma state quarters to Angela Knarr (from left), Joan Weisberg and Catie
Alfonso on Monday at the bank’s branch at 8822 S. Yale Ave.

BancFirst employee Stephanie Reese (right) hands out new Oklahoma state quarters to Angela Knarr (from left), Joan Weisberg and Catie
Alfonso on Monday at the bank’s branch at 8822 S. Yale Ave.

A close-up view of the new Oklahoma quarter
shows a scissor-tail flycatcher, the state bird, and
Indian blanket flowers, the state wildflower.

A display at BancFirst shows the official release of the Oklahoma state quarter on
Monday.
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