Nothing it is considered a magicians coin. They shave off one half of two quarters and then melt them together. On half will be thinner than the other.
A two headed quarter is not something that was done at the mint, it is a novelty item, generally with high enough magnification you can see the seam that the two coins were joined together. They aren't rare and really aren't worth any more than a quarter.
Double headed novelty and Magician's coins have no numismatic value, but depending on the denomination an quality most are under $10.00
Double headed novelty and Magician's coins have no numismatic value, but depending on the denomination an quality most are under $10.00.
It's just a Bicentennial quarter, spend it.
Not a US Mint product. Two quarters have been glued together and it has no collectible value.
There are no 3 headed quarters minted by the U.S. Mint.
This Was not made by the mint. Its a novelty coin or something someone has made. The coin has little or no value.
If the two dates are 1776 & 1976 It's a bicentennial quarter and it's still worth a quarter If it's a state or territorial quarter, has two dates on the back and one of them is between 1999 and 2009 it's also just worth a quarter. If it has two heads with a date on each side it's a magician's coin - see the Related Question.
If you are referring to two separate coins, they are both high mintage WWII dates and are only worth the silver they contain -- currently about $1.25 each. If you mean you have a 2-headed coin with those dates, this is a novelty item with a value of a couple dollars.
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Look at the date again. NO Washington quarter should have a date before 1932. Double headed and double tailed coins are called magician's coins and are made by machining and joining parts from two real quarters. They have no numismatic value but are sold by novelty shops for $5 - $10 and are available on eBay for $2 - $3.
You have a novelty item called a magician's coin. It's not real.