Would finding a 1963-D/S Washington Quarter be a big deal?....Pics added

Need some help from the Washington Quarter guys.
I'm quite confident that I have a 1963-D/S Washington in my hands. I had a few rolls of uncircularted Washingtons, so I did some roll searching today.
Found a few Type B Reverses, including a very nice '61 that I will post in another thread, but this D/S has peaked my interest. I've searched around and can't find any mention of the variety.
What's interesting is that the last "S" mint quarter was in 1953, so they would have had to use a pretty old die, correct? It looks like a Type A reverse, so not a proof die.
Thoughts?
I'll try to get some close up pics.

I'm quite confident that I have a 1963-D/S Washington in my hands. I had a few rolls of uncircularted Washingtons, so I did some roll searching today.
Found a few Type B Reverses, including a very nice '61 that I will post in another thread, but this D/S has peaked my interest. I've searched around and can't find any mention of the variety.
What's interesting is that the last "S" mint quarter was in 1953, so they would have had to use a pretty old die, correct? It looks like a Type A reverse, so not a proof die.
Thoughts?
I'll try to get some close up pics.


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Comments
d/s from my data
i do see the 2 listed d/d, thanks morgandollar1878
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<< <i>I for one would like to see the images. It could, however, be a die chip. >>
No die chip. Shape of an S under the D. The inside loop of the S is also visible inside the D.
I'll try to figure out how to get close-up pics. This should be fun.
The Whisker Cheek Collection - Top 50 Peace VAM Registry
Landmark Buffalo Collection
The Whisker Cheek Collection - Top 50 Peace VAM Registry
Landmark Buffalo Collection
Seriously, this is one of the running joke, yet serious, standard responses that shows up on VAMWorld when there's something on a coin that seems just too bizarre to be true, and this falls into that category.
First thing I'd do is get some flat pictures under a microscope of this and a few 1953-S quarters and do some overlays to show that it's plausibly a D/S. Then it needs to be examined by James Wiles, or whoever the CONECA quarter guy is. Meanwhile, you'll have to find a second, corroborating specimen, at which time this will become a Very Big Deal™.
Keeper of the VAM Catalog • Professional Coin Imaging • Prime Number Set • World Coins in Early America • British Trade Dollars • Variety Attribution
<< <i>Did you poke it with a stick?
Seriously, this is one of the running joke, yet serious, standard responses that shows up on VAMWorld when there's something on a coin that seems just too bizarre to be true, and this falls into that category.
First thing I'd do is get some flat pictures under a microscope of this and a few 1953-S quarters and do some overlays to show that it's plausibly a D/S. Then it needs to be examined by James Wiles, or whoever the CONECA quarter guy is. Meanwhile, you'll have to find a second, corroborating specimen, at which time this will become a Very Big Deal™. >>
Thanks for the reply John.
Actually, I did somewhat of a crude overlay and what appears to be an underlying S, matches the 53-s mintmark location.....
and better yet.......I already have a second specimen.
The Whisker Cheek Collection - Top 50 Peace VAM Registry
Landmark Buffalo Collection
I guarentee there will be some nay sayers here before long.
Keeper of the VAM Catalog • Professional Coin Imaging • Prime Number Set • World Coins in Early America • British Trade Dollars • Variety Attribution
My Adolph A. Weinman signature

IF, through some freak occurance, an S mint mark had been used then certainly by now, one would have shown uop and been documented.
The name is LEE!
BHNC #203
any chance of a straight on image?
<< <i>This makes no sense at all since there simply was not an S Mintmark in 1963. >>
Same goes for the 1900-O/CC dollars.
Keeper of the VAM Catalog • Professional Coin Imaging • Prime Number Set • World Coins in Early America • British Trade Dollars • Variety Attribution