U.S. Mint Unveils Washington D.C. Duke Ellington Quarter
Monday, January 26, 2009
AP
This artist rendering provided by the U.S. Mint shows the Washington, District of Columbia quarter, featuring Duke Ellington.
WASHINGTON The nation's capital now has its own quarter.
The U.S. Mint on Monday released the coin featuring Washington native and jazz great Duke Ellington at his piano. It also has an inscription of the city's motto: "Justice for All."
Collectors can go online or to banks to buy two-roll sets and bags of up to 1,000 quarters.
D.C. Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton says officials are planning an event to celebrate the coin later this month.
Last year, the U.S. Mint rejected designs that included the slogan "Taxation Without Representation," a reference to the long-running gripe that D.C. residents pay federal taxes without full representation in Congress.
The Mint's state quarter program finished in November with Hawaii and is moving on to U.S. territories.











