| Survival Estimate | |
|---|---|
| All Grades | 191,250,000 |
| 60 or Better | 95,625,000 |
| 65 or Better | 57,375,000 |
| Numismatic Rarity | |
|---|---|
| All Grades | R-1.0 |
| 60 or Better | R-1.0 |
| 65 or Better | R-1.0 |
| Relative Rarity By Type All Specs in this Type | |
|---|---|
| All Grades | N/A |
| 60 or Better | N/A |
| 65 or Better | N/A |
| Relative Rarity By Series All Specs in this Series | |
|---|---|
| All Grades | N/A |
| 60 or Better | N/A |
| 65 or Better | N/A |
Alabama became the 22nd state to join the Union when it ratified the United States Constitution on December 14, 1819. Accordingly, the 2003-P Alabama State Quarter (#14016) became the 22nd entry in the 50 State Quarters series. Released on March 17, 2003, it was the second quarter issued during the fifth year of the popular program.
The design, featuring civil rights pioneer Helen Keller and an inscription in Braille, was selected by Alabama Governor Don Siegelman (D) in January 2001.
Helen Keller was born in Tuscumbia, Alabama, on June 27, 1880. In late 1881, at just 19 months old, Keller developed a serious illness that left her permanently blind and deaf.
Given Alabama’s conservative politics, the selection of Helen Keller was arguably an unexpected choice. It is most likely that Keller the myth (the inspirational figure) rather than Keller the flesh-and-blood political intellectual was chosen to grace the reverse.
Numismatic Note: The 2003 Alabama State Quarter is ranked #2 in Ron Guth’s survey of the 100 Greatest Women on Coins (Whitman Publishing, 2015).
At the height of its popularity, interest in the 50 State Quarters program approached a national mania. While the series remains highly collectible, its long-term price performance is consistent with any mass-produced object hoarded en masse. The upside to this, is that sufficient quantities of coins remain in the hands of non-collectors that hunting for ultra-high end examples is not an expensive proposition, especially for those trying to add a coin or two to the upper end of the PCGS Condition Census.
As of this writing (December 2025), PCGS has only certified three coins at MS68 and the majority of coins in our holders grade MS66 or below.
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