No Mercury head dimes were struck at the West Point Mint. The "W" on the front of the coin is the designer's initial.
Pretty much impossible because the West Point Mint didn't start making coins until 1980. A. A. Weinmann broke in to the mint and made about 500 of these mercy dimes with a w for the mint. Depending on the condition. only about 75 of these dimes were recovered after they found out he moved into New Paltz NY and hid them all around the area. The estimated price of one of these dimes is $100,000,000
* Color Television (1940) * The Jeep (1940)* Color Television (1940) * The Jeep (1940)* Color Television (1940) * The Jeep (1940)* Color Television (1940) * The Jeep (1940)* Color Television (1940) * The Jeep (1940)* Color Television (1940) * The Jeep (1940)
9 countries *Austria (1938) *Czech Republic (1938 and 1939); Slovakia became German satellite in 1939. *Poland (1939) *Denmark (1940) *Norway (1940) *Luxembourg (1940) *Netherlands (1940) *Belgium (1940) *France (1940) Plus the Channel Islands
Poland- September 1, 1939 Norway- April 9, 1940 Denmark- April 1, 1940 Belgium- May 10, 1940 Netherlands- May 10, 1940 Luxembourg- May 10, 1940 France- June 14, 1940
9th September 1940 was a Monday.
Mercury dimes from 1940 to 1945 in average circulated condition are mostly valued for the silver content, about $3.00.
6-29-11>>> All Mercury Head dimes from 1940 to 1945 regardless of any mintmarks are considered very common, in average circulated condition they have the same retail values of $3.00.
All Mercury Head dimes from 1940 to 1945 regardless of any mintmarks are considered very common, in average circulated condition they have the same retail values of $3.00. The silver value is about $1.60.
So many Mercury dimes were made from 1940 to 1945 regardless of any mintmarks that most are only valued for the silver, about $3.00
Mercury head dimes from 1940 to 1945 with or without mintmarks are all very common, especially in circulated grades. Most are valued just for the silver, as of today 10-13-11 it's $2.00. An uncirculated coin is $3.00-$4.00.
Pretty much impossible because the West Point Mint didn't start making coins until 1980. A. A. Weinmann broke in to the mint and made about 500 of these mercy dimes with a w for the mint. Depending on the condition. only about 75 of these dimes were recovered after they found out he moved into New Paltz NY and hid them all around the area. The estimated price of one of these dimes is $100,000,000
4-5-11>>> All Winged Liberty Head (Mercury) dimes regardless of mint marks dated from 1940 to 1945 are all very common and have the same retail values of $3.00 in average condition.
All Mercury Head dimes from 1940 to 1945 regardless of any mintmarks are considered very common, in average circulated condition have the same retail values of $3.00.
All Mercury Head dimes from 1940 to 1945 regardless of any mintmarks are considered very common, in average circulated condition have the same retail values of $3.00.
Mercury Head dimes dated from 1940 to 1945 regardless of mintmarks (if any) are very common. Coins in average circulated condition have a retail value of $3.00
All Mercury dimes from 1940 to 1945 regardless of mintmarks in average circulated condition have the same retail value of $2.00 At that time Philadelphia didn't put the "P" mint mark on coins struck there, so your coin is from that Mint.
Anything dated 1940 to 1945 wouldn't be a Roosevelt dime. The design wasn't adopted until 1946 after his death in office. And in any case a living president couldn't appear on circulation coins! Most Roosevelt dimes from that period retail for $1.00-$1.25 each. The only exception is a 1949-S coin that sells for about $2. "Mercury" dimes from 1940 to 1945 are similarly priced.