6-26-11>>> The coins are called Winged Liberty Head or Mercury dimes and all of them dated 1940 to 1945 regardless of any mintmarks in average circulated condition are valued the same at $3.00-$4.00.
A 1940 Mercury dime (not Liberty) is very common. If it shows any wear, the value is just for the silver, about $1.90.
It isn't a liberty dime, it is a Roosevelt dime, it isn't silver and only worth 10 cents.
If it is a circulated dime, then it is worth about $1.00, mostly depending on the value of silver
If in good condition it can be worth a few dollars. The dime was also silver.
The 1941 Mercury dime is very common, most are valued at $2.00 just for the silver.
A 1940 Mercury dime (not Liberty) is very common. If it shows any wear, the value is just for the silver, about $1.90.
It isn't a liberty dime, it is a Roosevelt dime, it isn't silver and only worth 10 cents.
If it is a circulated dime, then it is worth about $1.00, mostly depending on the value of silver
Assuming the coin is a 1940 Dime a circulated coin is about $2.00 a Mint state coin is $8.00
If in good condition it can be worth a few dollars. The dime was also silver.
25 dollars
The 1941 Mercury dime is very common, most are valued at $2.00 just for the silver.
A 1941 Winged Liberty head Dime - aka - Mercury Dime - in good condition (G4) is worth: $2; if the mint state is MS60, its value rises to: $8.00.
It is a common date worth about $2 in scrap silver.
About $1.30 just for the silver.
It's worth at least $2 for its silver content, and possibly more depending on condition.
A 1940 "Mercury" dime has about $1.11 worth of silver (as of January 7, 2008) and is worth between about $1.50 in Very Fine Condition, $2.50 in Extremely Fine, $4.00 in Amlost Uncirculated and $8 - $60 in Uncirculated (depending on how good shape it is in). A 1940 dime with an "D" mintmark (for "Denver") or "S" mintmark (for "San Francisco") would be, broadly speaking, worth 10-20% more than its Philadelphia-minted counterpart.