The Oklahoma State Quarter, released in 2008, features the scissor-tailed flycatcher and Indian blanket. The design was chosen through a democratic process and approved by the US Department of the Treasury. It is part of the 50 States series, which began in 1997 to encourage coin collecting.
The Oklahoma State Quarter dates to 2008 and is the 46th quarter to be released in the United States Mint 50 States series. The Mint issued each quarter in the same order in which the states were admitted to the Union. As with other neighborhoods, the design of the Oklahoma state neighborhood was chosen by popular vote and the state governor. Despite this, fewer Oklahoma quarters were produced than all other quarters in the series.
Oklahoma became the 46th state in the United States when it joined the Union in 1907. The state has a much longer history, being part of the original Louisiana State Purchase in 1803. In addition to its Rich and often painful Native American history, Oklahoma The state owes its existence to a large number of immigrants from across America and Europe and the discovery of oil.
The Oklahoma state quarter itself bears the year of its issue, 2008, and the Latin phrase E Pluribus Unum, which means “of many, one”. The coin features the scissor-tailed flycatcher, the state bird of Oklahoma and the state wild flower, the Indian blanket. The front of the coin is completed with “Oklahoma 1907”.
Selecting Oklahoma’s state quarter was a Democratic process that took several years to complete. The first step in the process was to allow people to submit design concepts. Eventually, the Denver Mint received a thousand concepts. The mint then reduced this number to a list of five.
The shortlist was revealed to the Oklahoma public in 2007. At the same time, a popular vote was opened for citizens to express their opinions on which design was better. The public overwhelmingly voted for the Scissortail Flycatcher design created from the original concept by Susan Gamble, who is one of the Mint’s five master designers, while the governor of the state at the time, Brad Henry, decided to vote in favor of the favorite of voters.
The final stage in Oklahoma’s state neighborhood selection involved approval of the project by the US Department of the Treasury. Since all factions of state and national government had approved of Gamble’s design, the coin could be engraved by Phebe Hemphill. The coin was then mass produced in Denver and released in Oklahoma on January 28, 2008.
The broader concept of state coins dates back many years, since the founding of the 50 States series in 1997. The purpose of the series was to encourage people of all ages and backgrounds to collect each of the state’s 50 boroughs and, later, those of the capital and other territories. The idea for the series originated in 1993 with the Citizens Commemorative Coin Advisory Committee, but was not approved by the committee until 1995. Philip N. Diehl then swung Rep. Michael Castle to the idea in 1995 by suggesting that coins were issued in the order of joining the Union. Both houses of Congress approved the idea in 1996 and the selection process began.
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