Plated coins are considered to be altered pieces. There were over 800 million 1958-D cents minted so anything that's been damaged is only worth a penny.
From 1982 to date all Lincoln pennies are copper plated zinc, the 1993-D is just a penny.
The only "silver" penny was minted in 1943 to support the war effort. Yours is probably zinc plated.
It's worth 3 cents.
My guess would be that it was plated with gold (or a gold-colored metal) after minting, and that it is thus worth about a penny.
One Cent is the value. The US has never made a silver penny. It may look like silver or have been silver plated but it has no collectible value.
By 1985, U.S. pennies were copper-plated zinc. It's worth one cent.
No. The US 1961-D penny is 95% Copper and 5% Zinc. Any "silver" cents you have are almost certainly plated. The only exceptions are the famous 1943 steel cents. These have a silvery color in their original condition.
Sorry! It's worth a penny. It's only gold plated which doesn't add any value to the coin.
No US one cent coin was EVER struck in silver. It may have been plated or look like silver, but it's not silver. It's just a penny.
Well it go up to 100 cash to 450 Cash I am welling to bye if so * tylerkman@ymail.com *
That wasn't something done at the mint, rather the cent was likely plated with zinc or nickel. So it has little to no collector value. The US government has never struck a penny in silver.
It's worth 3 cents. Post-WWII wheat pennies are extremely common.