W is the initial of A. A. Weinman. The mint mark is on the back. Please see the related question for more.
W is the monogram of the designer, A. A. Weinman. Mint marks were on the backs of most coins up till 1968 and in any case the West Point Mint didn't exist in 1942. Please see the Related Question.
That's not a mint mark. It's the monogram of the designer A.A. Weinmann. The West Point Mint did not open until the 1980s and only strikes commemorative coins and cents. Mercury dimes had their mint mark in the space to the right of the word ONE on the dime's back. For a 1942 dime it will either be blank (Phila.) or have a small "S" for San Francisco, or a "D" for Denver.
The W is the designer's initial. If there is a mintmark it will be on the back. Please see the Related Question for more information.
The W is not a mint mark but an initial. These coins are not rare and are worth $4 in circulated condition. In uncirculated condition they are worth an average of $10 to around $50 depending on condition.
The "W" you see is not a mintmark. It' the monogram of the designer A. A. Weinman. The mintmarks are on the reverse of the coins. 1940 is a common date, most are only valued for the silver, about $1.50.
W is the monogram of the designer, A. A. Weinman. Mint marks were on the backs of most coins up till 1968 and in any case the West Point Mint didn't exist in 1942. Please see the Related Question.
That's not a mint mark. It's the monogram of the designer A.A. Weinmann. The West Point Mint did not open until the 1980s and only strikes commemorative coins and cents. Mercury dimes had their mint mark in the space to the right of the word ONE on the dime's back. For a 1942 dime it will either be blank (Phila.) or have a small "S" for San Francisco, or a "D" for Denver.
The W is the designer's initial. If there is a mintmark it will be on the back. Please see the Related Question for more information.
The W is not a mint mark but an initial. These coins are not rare and are worth $4 in circulated condition. In uncirculated condition they are worth an average of $10 to around $50 depending on condition.
The "W" you see is not a mintmark. It' the monogram of the designer A. A. Weinman. The mintmarks are on the reverse of the coins. 1940 is a common date, most are only valued for the silver, about $1.50.
The W to the right of the neck is not a mint mark it's the monogram of the designer Adolph A. Weinman. The mint mark (if any) is on the back of the coin at the bottom to the right of the E in one and to the left of the fasces.This coin has a retail value of $1.00 to $3.00 in average circulated condition.
Well, first off you don't have a 1918 W Mercury dime, the West Point Mint wouldn't be established for several more years and never produced any coins with a W mintmark for circulation. The W is the designer's initials, any mintmark will be on the reverse. None of the 1918 coins are rare so they are worth the price of silver, assuming they are in circulated condition, which is about $2.11 at the time of writing, if uncirculated it could be worth quite a bit more.
W isn't a standard mint mark for any Mercury dime. 1935 isn't a rare date, so the value is at least $2 for the silver content, and up to $7 in uncirculated condition for Philadelphia, $25 for Denver, and $15 for San Francisco.
No "W" mint mark on a 1923 Dime, it's the designers monogram (A. Weinman) the mint mark is on the reverse to the left of the fasces
You're looking at the designer's monogram - an intertwined A-W for A. A. Weinmann. The mint mark is on the back next to the word ONE. See the related question for values.
A. W. Tillinghast died in 1942.
Not quite. The West Point Mint didn't start making coins until 1973. You're looking at the designer's monogram - an intertwined A W for A. Weinman. Please see the Related Question for values.