Philadelphia: 89,348,000 Denver: 44,734,000 San Francisco: 11,300,000 Source - www.coinfacts.com
US nickelsPhiladelphia: 571,680,000Denver: 626,160,000San Francisco (proofs only): 2,259,847Canadian nickels221,472,000
Philadelphia (no mint mark): 58,264,000 Denver ("D"): 12,092,000 San Francisco ("S"): 10,300,000 Proofs: None
There were 372,000,000 2004-D and 361,440,000 2004-P Peace Medal nickels minted. There were also 344,880,000 2004-D and 366,720,000 2004-P keelboat design nickels minted.
Based on US Mint figures, a total of 1,212,895,399 buffalo (= Indian head) nickels were minted from 1913 to 1938
2.6 million.
Including the proof 1942P coin (27,600) 869,923,700 War Nickels were struck
Philadelphia ("P" mint mark): 39,840,000 Denver ("D"): 46,800,000 San Francisco ("S"): 2,179,867; only minted for proof sets
There were 154,296,000 King George V 1936 British Pennies minted. There were no 1936 King Edward VIII British coins minted since he abdicated before the coins could be prepared.
Only 5 examples are known
None, because there is no coin called a "buffalo head" nickel, and the only US nickels that ever contained silver were special "war nickels" minted from 1942 to 1945.Buffalo nickels were minted from 1913 to 1938 and are made of the same 75% copper / 25% nickel alloy used for all US nickels except war nickels.
It's right on the front: For nickels minted 1938 to 2004 it's at the 4:00 position near the rim. Nickels minted in 2005 have the date at the 5:00 position near the rim. Nickels minted since 2006 have the date below the word "Liberty" Many people are confused by the special commemorative nickels made to honor the Lewis and Clark Expedition. Some of these coins have the expeditions' starting date 1803 on the back, but that's clearly not the date the coins were minted.