50 cents.
All of the Bicentennial coins with the dual date of 1776-1976 struck for circulation have face value only regardless of denomination.
All of the Bicentennial coins with the dual date of 1776-1976 struck for circulation have face value only regardless of denomination.
It's worth 50 cents.
None of the Bicentennial coins with the dual date of 1776-1976 regardless of denomination or mintmark struck for general circulation have more than face value. Only proof and uncirculated collectors coins sold from the Mint have premiums.
It's just a half dollar. None made for circulation have any silver. Only a proof coin would have more than face value.
Uh, the Bicentennial was in 1976, remember. (1776 + 200 = 1976) If you have a 1952 half dollar it's a standard Franklin piece. See the Related Question.
All of the Bicentennial coins with the dual date of 1776-1976 struck for circulation have face value only regardless of denomination.
All of the Bicentennial coins with the dual date of 1776-1976 struck for circulation have face value only regardless of denomination.
It's worth 50 cents.
None of the Bicentennial coins with the dual date of 1776-1976 regardless of denomination or mintmark struck for general circulation have more than face value. Only proof and uncirculated collectors coins sold from the Mint have premiums.
It's just a half dollar. None made for circulation have any silver. Only a proof coin would have more than face value.
Please check again and post a new question. There were no dual-dated 1979 US half dollars. The only dual-dated US coins were issued for the Bicentennial and carried the dates 1776-1976.
Remember studying the American Revolution and the Declaration of Independence? The US broke away from England in 1776 so 1976 was the bicentennial year. Special designs of quarters, halves, and dollars were minted with the dual date as part of the celebrations. To meet the demand for these special coins, minting started in 1975 so there weren't any quarters, halves or dollars with that date. All carried 1776-1976 regardless of the year they were actually made.
None of the Bicentennial coins with the dual date 1776-1976 made for general circulation contain any silver or are worth more than face value. Only Proof and collectors coins sold from the US Mint are worth more.
no clue 2 dollars
Please take another look at your coin. There were no 1975-dated half dollars; all dual-dated coins from the Bicentennial celebrations carried the dates 1776-1976 even if they were struck in 1975. There's more information at the Related Question.
It's just a half dollar. No business strike Kennedy is worth more than face value