Statewide Iowa (RI) — Senator Chuck Grassley says he’s shocked the Treasury Department has abandoned a plan to issue a commemorative coin honoring the women’s suffrage movement.
Special quarters will be issued by the U.S. Mint as part of the celebration of the 250th anniversary of American independence.
Special quarters will be issued by the U.S. Mint soon as part of the “America 250” celebration, but designs about abolition and the push to pass the 19th amendment have been replaced with designs of the Mayflower and the Gettysburg Address.
Ruth Corwin Grassley, the senator’s mother, was one of the first women in Iowa, and perhaps in the entire United States, to vote in an election. Grassley’s mother was among a group of Black Hawk and Grundy County women who voted in a local election on August 30th of 1920, just days after the 19th Amendment went into effect.
Grassley also notes Iowan Carrie Chapman Catt was president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association for 10 years, including 1919, the year women won the right to vote.
The U.S. Treasury Secretary approved the final designs for the commemorative dimes, nickels, and quarters. The designs will only appear on coins minted in 2026, and the U.S. Mint will start circulating the coins in January. A commemorative penny and half-dollar will be sold to collectors.
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