California State Quarter
The first quarter released in 2005 honors California, and is the 31st
in the United States Mint's 50 State Quarters® Program. California was
admitted into the Union on September 9, 1850, becoming our Nation’s 31st
State. Nicknamed the "Golden State," California’s quarter depicts
naturalist and conservationist John Muir admiring Yosemite Valley’s
monolithic granite headwall known as "Half Dome" and also contains a
soaring California condor. The coin bears the inscriptions "California,"
"John Muir," "Yosemite Valley" and "1850."
In 1849, the year before California gained statehood, the family of
11-year-old John Muir emigrated from Scotland to the United States,
settling in Wisconsin. In 1868, at the age of 30, Muir sailed up the
West Coast and landed in San Francisco. He made his home in the Yosemite
Valley, describing the Sierra Nevada Mountains as "the Range of Light…
the most divinely beautiful of all the mountain chains I have seen." He
devoted the rest of his life to the conservation of natural beauty,
publishing more than 300 articles and 10 books that expanded his
naturalist philosophy.
In 1890, Congress established Yosemite National Park, and in 1892
John Muir helped form the Sierra Club to protect it, serving as that
organization’s President until his death in 1914.
The California condor, with a wingspan as long as nine feet, is also
featured on the coin in a tribute to the successful repopulation of the
once nearly extinct bird.
The 20-member California State Quarter Commission was formed to
solicit design concepts from California citizens and to review all
submissions. The Commission forwarded 20 design concepts to Governor
Gray Davis’s office for further consideration. From these, five were
chosen as finalists and sent for final review to the United States Mint.
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger chose the final selection from this group
of five. The four other design concepts considered included "Waves and
Sun," "Gold Miner," "Golden Gate Bridge," and the "Giant Sequoia"
design. The Department of Treasury approved the "John Muir/Yosemite
Valley" design on April 15, 2004.
Provided by the U.S. Mint
Website: www.usmint.gov
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