I dont know about the 1950's, but Wm Rogers did make sterling, look for the mark sterling or 925, I believe they also consider 800 a low grade of sterling
Rogers & Bros. (not to be confused with FB Rogers or Wm Rogers), founded in 1847, was a maker of silver-plated kitchenware, including trays, although they were more noted for their flatware. They were purchased by International Silver Co. in the 1950s (as was FB Rogers). The 1847 is part of a maker's mark, not a manufacturing year. Resale of their silver-plated trays averages about $15.50, according to the Silver Plate Flatware Co. For more information, see Related Links, below.
1950s
US cents were never struck in silver. All cents from the 1950s were struck in a bronze alloy. Your coin is almost certainly plated, and has no extra value.
Check that coin again. There were no U.S. silver dollars minted in the 1950s.
Silver certificates were unique to the U.S. They haven't been printed since the 1950s.
Of course. And "coin silver" only refers to the US standard of 90% pure silver coins. Most other countries (especially in the British empire) used to use sterling silver. Coins have used many different alloys, for example, post WWI Canadian coins are 80% silver, silver UK coins dated 1920-1946 are 50% silver, some ancient "silver" coins are known as billion coins and they contain very little silver, and Mexico issued a 1 peso coin in the late 1950s and 60s that was only 10% silver!
There are three "core conditions" of counselling, as set out by Carl Rogers in the 1950s: empathy, unconditional positive regard and congruence.
fb rogers tea and coffee pot sets marked 1883 are not from 1883 that is the year that the company was founded, they could be from the 1950s or 1970s or newer! The company is still in business and lots of people own them!! They are worth $5 to $21 per piece maybe a little more for a large item
Sir William Pickering.
Although Jimmy Rogers's rhythm guitar formed the backbone of Muddy Waters's sound from the late 1940s to the mid-1950s, he humbly allowed the spotlight to fall on others. "Of the many less-heralded players who made considerable and indeliblecontributions to blues recordings in the 1950s," wrote Craig Ruskey in Blues on Stage, "Jimmy Rogers' name remains near the top of the list." Over time, critics identified the guitarist as an essential ingredient in the development of post-World War II electric blues. Tony Russell wrote in the London Guardian, "As the second guitarist in the Waters band ... Rogers was a key figure in the development of the Chicago blues ensemble." The recordings he made alone and with Waters during the 1950s would also influence a number of rock-n-roll players in the 1960s. "Rogers was the man who plugged into a primitive amp-1and blistered on the songs that fired an island of white, middle-class, British, would-be guitar heroes," noted Colin Harper in the London Independent.Read more: jimmy-rogers
Very definitely. When US currency was downsized in 1923, new silver certificates were issued in denominations of $1, $5, and $10. Various series were printed until the 1950s.
228,000 were struck and most all were stored in treasury vaults until the 1950s