The price in 2006 was 39 cents, which is exactly what the stamp is still worth in 2016.
$.44
1908
10 cents, like all other dimes dated 1965 and later.
Alan Greenspan served as Chairman of the Federal Reserve from 1987 to 2006. Ben Bernanke served as Chairman of the Federal Reserve from 2006 to 2014.
Modern coins are unlikely to be worth anything above face value. Exchange rates change every day so you'd need to look at a site such as www.xe.com for the current rate against the USD.
Yes and no. You can apply the Lady Liberty stamp from 2006 toward postage. But you will have to add 3 cents worth of stamps in addition. The Lady Liberty stamp is worth 39 cents. Today 1st Class postage is 42 cents. As of this writing (June 2009) first class postage is 44 cents, so you need to add 5 cents.
Statue of Liberty in front of US Flag.
Yes, just add an additional 6 cents to the letter.
That would depend on the value of the stamp. You paid the price printed on it. For First Class that would be 39 cents for most of 2006. The first week it would have been only 37 cents, but the price went up on the 8th of January.
2006 worth 44cents
June 30, 2002 the rate of the stamp was 37 cents. I don't believe the rate changed intil January 8, 2006 when the stamp rate went up to 39 cents.
In the year 2005 in the United States, First Class postage was 37 cents. It went up to 39 cents the next year on January 8th of 2006. That covered the first ounce of postage.
1985 was the year that first class stamps went to 22 cents .
The US domestic rate for an ordinary 1st-class letter was 37 cents until Jan. 8, 2006 when it went up to 39 cents.
In the U.S. from 8 January 2006 through 13 May 2007.
Depends on when during 2006, but for most of the year US First Class postage was 39 cents. The postage rate went from 37 to 39 cents on the 8th of January of 2006. It went to 41 cents in May of 2007.
No -- stamps have no denomination, but are designated "first class" sold for 39 cents in 2006 and that is what they are still worth-- you would have to add 3 cents additional postage.