The 1941 nickel doesn't contain any silver, and is worth maybe 10 cents.
Pennies in 1941 were mostly copper, not nickel, and they're worth about 5 cents.
Most are worth about $1.00 just for the silver.
That's a silver war nickel from WWII, which contains 35% silver. It's worth about $2.
It's a very common date nickel that's still occasionally found in circulation. This date does not contain any silver and is only face value.
16 different Jefferson nickels are in this span of dates, 11 are 35% silver, 5 are cppper-nickel. Post new question.
Pennies in 1941 were mostly copper, not nickel, and they're worth about 5 cents.
Most are worth about $1.00 just for the silver.
That's a silver war nickel from WWII, which contains 35% silver. It's worth about $2.
It's a very common date nickel that's still occasionally found in circulation. This date does not contain any silver and is only face value.
None. 1942-1945 were the only years silver was used to make nickels.
See related answers.
16 different Jefferson nickels are in this span of dates, 11 are 35% silver, 5 are cppper-nickel. Post new question.
It's made of nickel, not silver, and realistically is still worth one dollar.
Sorry, no Buffalo nickels were ever struck in silver.
It depends if they are copper-nickel (post-1964) or 90% silver quarters (1964 and earlier). If they are copper-nickel, dated 1965 and earlier, they are only worth face, if they are silver, they are worth the silver content.
Anything minted in the 1970s is made of copper-nickel, not silver, and is only worth face value.
It's just a Jefferson nickel, 1941 coins are still found in circulation and ALL US coins have the national motto. Spend it.