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The Honolulu Advertiser
Updated at 5:44 p.m., Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Hawaii commemorative coin, the final state quarter, struck at Denver Mint

Photo gallery: Hawaii State Quarters Struck Today

By P. SOLOMON BANDA
Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Gov. Linda Lingle talks about the Hawai'i commemorative quarter that she helped strike during ceremonies at the U.S. Mint in Denver today. Hawai'i's quarter is the 50th and final quarter minted in the U.S. Mint's 50 State Quarters Program.

ED ANDRIESKI | Associated Press

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

The new Hawai'i quarter, bottom right of case, displayed with other 2008 releases, is held by Fay Ann Chun , with the Hawai'i State Foundation on Culture and the Arts.

Advertiser file photo

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DENVER — Gov. Linda Lingle led a delegation to the Denver Mint today for the striking of the first of Hawai'i's commemorative quarters — and the last in a 10-year series commemorating the 50 states.

Hawai'i's coin features King Kamehameha I stretching a hand toward the eight major Hawaiian Islands. Inscribed is the state motto, "The Life of the Land is Perpetuated in Righteousness," in Hawaiian. It will go into circulation Nov. 3, and a ceremony marking the release will be held at Bishop Square in Honolulu on Nov. 10, said U.S. Mint spokesman Greg Hernandez.

"It's our vision for Hawai'i's future and it shows our respect for all the land," Lingle said of the quarter's design and motto. "And it also shows that although there are many islands, we're united as a state."

Delegation members, including Lingle, state dignitaries and coin collectors, lined up to push a button on a stamp press that spit out individual quarters. Many had their picture taken while flashing the shaka.

For coin collector Rock Villaruel, a guest of design commission member Gregory Hunt, today's event fulfilled a boyhood dream. Villaruel bought his first collecting magazine after becoming interested in coins at age 12. A trip to San Francisco's historic mint years ago ended in disappointment. It was boarded up.

"This is my first time visiting a mint, and it's about time," the 48-year-old Villaruel said.

Kamehameha, who ruled in the early 1800s and unified the islands, was picked instead of designs that featured a hula dancer, Diamond Head on the main island of O'ahu, and a surfer modeled after a young Duke Kahanamoku. For Hunt, the chosen coin is about reminding people that Hawai'i is part of America.

"Sometimes people forget that we are part of the United States," Hunt said. "Visitors to the Islands say, 'You know, back in the states,' and we remind them, 'You mean, back on the Mainland.' "

Lingle said Hawai'i's coin will be very popular with coin collectors because it's the last of the state coins. The first, Delaware's, was released in 1999.

"And it's a coincidence, but it's coming up on our 50th anniversary as a state, we're the 50th state and the 50th quarter," said Lauren Kamei, a freshman at the University of Hawai'i at Manoa who served on the commission.

More than 34 billion of the state commemorative quarters have been produced. They were released at 10-week intervals in the order the states were admitted into the Union.

The coins have been snapped up by roughly 147 million collectors in the U.S., bringing in $3.5 billion in profit by the end of last year, excluding special-issue sets. The coins are also produced in Philadelphia.

Mint officials expect about 520 million of the Hawai'i quarter to be produced.