Australian Coins minted at the Melbourne Mint do not have a mintmark.
British Edward VII (1902-1910) Sovereigns and Half-Sovereigns were minted at the Royal Mint London, Ottawa, Melbourne, Perth and Sydney Mints. The coins minted in London have no mintmark. The Sovereign and Half-Sovereign coins minted elsewhere have a mintmark "on the ground" below the horse and above the date. The coins minted in Ottawa have a mintmark "C". The coins minted in Melbourne have a mintmark "M". The coins minted in Perth have a mintmark "P". The coins minted in Sydney have a mintmark "S". The letters BP to the right of the date is the designers initials (Benedetto Pistrucci) who designed the St George and the Dragon scene.
Any 1942, 1943 or 1944 Australian Threepence, will have the "S" (San Francisco) or "D" (Denver) mintmark on the reverse of the coin, on the right hand side, just below the fourth digit of the year. Any coins minted in Melbourne will have no mintmark.
Minted Denver, CO.MoreA "D" on any coin minted since 1906 means it was minted in Denver, Colorado. Other mint marks you may see are:"P": Philadelphia (but current Philadelphia pennies, and Philadelphia coins before 1980 except wartime nickels, don't have mint marks, so it gets confusing)"S": San Francisco (on older coins and modern proof sets)Coins minted over 100 years ago may also have an "O" for New Orleans, "CC" for Carson City, and very old gold coins may have a D or C on them but you won't find any of them in change!
All coins have a date that they were minted, so by looking at the coin carefully, you will find the date the coin was minted.
The mint mark that you will find on the 1961 Washington quarter is the letter "D" and it is located on the reverse side of the coin just above the letters "ER" in the word "QUARTER". These coins were minted in Denver, Colorado. The 1961 Washington quarter was also minted in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania but in 1961 Philadelphia was not putting a mint mark on the coins produced there.
You can find one stamped on the coins minted for Panama. They use dollars but call them "Balboas". They actually use coins minted by the US mint in the exact same sizes and denominations as American coins and most denominations of the coins show an image of Balboa on them.
Try the "Standard Catalog of World Coins, 1701 to 1800" published by Krause Publications.
Quite simply, there were no US dollar coins minted that year.
you can find it ABOVE the DO in dollar on the back
Answer All coins are considered worth something depending on how many of that particular coin was minted in 1943. You can find this out by buying a book on old coins, and it will tell you how many were minted that year and what your coin is worth.
It would depend on the Florin of which country you refer to. The Florins of most British Empire countries were minted at only one mint in 1944, therefore a mintmark was not used. The 1944 Australian Florin was minted both at the Melbourne Mint and the San Francisco Mint. Those minted at the Melbourne Mint have no mintmark. Those minted at the San Francisco Mint have a small "S" above the date and below the Coat of Arms.
Mint marks are on the back of the coins, it's under the wreath on $1 coins and the eagle on $2.50 & $5.00 coins.