US cents were struck on steel in 1943 not 1944.
About 10 cents
The 1943-S steel Lincoln cent is common. Average value is 10 to 25 cents.
Penny, not pennie; Bronze, not steel. If you have a 1939 cent that appears to be steel it's almost certainly plated. In any case, if it were steel it would stick to a magnet so that's the first thing to check.
It is called a Lincoln Cent and it is valued from $1 to $75,000 depending upon the mint mark, the condition of the coin and any mint errors.
1943 was the only year cents were minted in steel. If you have a silver-color 1949 cent it's been plated or otherwise altered. That makes it an altered coin worth only face value. But don't shed any tears; even in almost-uncirculated condition an unaltered 1949-S cent is worth less than a quarter.
About 10 cents
1 cent
The Lincoln cent 5 to 10 cents, the Jefferson about $1.00 for the silver.
You would need to get it appraised by a coin dealer. 1944 the US was making pennies out of steel.. and they are very rare.
Only a couple of these have been authenticated, and are worth over $100,000. However there are many counterfeits out there -- copper pennies that have been zinc plated. Do the magnet test -- a real 1944 steel cent will stick to a magnet. If it passes this test, and has been examined for an altered date (using a strong magnifier), then you would need to get it certified (preferably by PCGS or NGC).
he is worth every cent !!!!!!
Pennies (or one cent coins) were not made of steel in 1965 in the United States (nor in Canada, Great Britain, Australia or New Zealand).
The 1943-S steel Lincoln cent is common. Average value is 10 to 25 cents.
It is worth 1 cent.
It's only worth about 4 cents, and the Aussie dollar is nearly equivalent in value to US dollars, which makes it worth about 4 cents Australian.
The 1943-S steel Lincoln cent is common. Average value is 10 to 25 cents.
steel is worth about $0.10 per kilo