This nickel-brass 50c may be worth up to maybe $1 depending on amount of wear and collector demand. You might also try a library for a copy of the Standard Catalog of World Coins for pictures, values and lots more interesting info. Brad
aprox-$150
20 million
Apparently the company went bankrupt in 1964, so I believe the correct answer is nothing.
That's far too general a question to answer without knowing specific information about each coin:- What's its date?- What's its denomination?- If they're U.S. coins, what's its mint mark?As a rule of thumb:- any cents dated 1945 or later are worth at most 2c each- nickels dated 1946 or later are only worth a nickel (except for a 1950-D)- dimes dated 1940 to 1964 are worth at least 90c for their silver- dimes dated 1965 and later are worth 10c- quarters dated 1940 to 1964 are worth at least $2.25 for their silver- quarters dated 1965 and later are worth 25c- halves dated 1940 to 1964 are worth at least $4.50 for their silver- halves dated 1965 to 1969 are worth at least $2.25 for their silver- halves dated 1971 and later are worth 50cAnything that's earlier would have to be evaluated on a coin-by-coin basis.If you sort out the common coins and want to convert them to bills, DO NOT USE ONE OF THOSE COIN COUNTING MACHINES that seem to be in every supermarket !!!! Most of them charge 8 to 10 cents for every dollar processed, so you've immediately taken a loss. Check with a couple of banks to see if they'll count them for free. In the Northeast there's a major regional bank (not allowed to name it, but their spokespeople are Regis and Kelly) that will count coins for free whether you're a depositor or not.
Well you do have FDIC insurance, but is your money really all that safe? In 1964 a cup of coffee was ten cents. Today it is over a dollar. In 1964 it cost 4 cents to mail a letter. Today it cost over 40 cents. The point is that that dollar you put in the bank in bank in 1964 is only worth about ten cents today. You lost 90% of your money. How safe is that? What will the dollar be worth in a few more years? One cent? Every time the government spends money that they don't have, and they print more you dollars loose value. Why is it that the average person doesn't understand this. I don't know.
About $12.00
Any US half dollar minted in 1964 or earlier is currently worth at least $10 for its silver content.
1964 is an extremely common date for US half dollars. As of August 2017, one is worth $6-and-change for the silver.
That's a very common date for half dollars, and they're currently worth a little over $10.
It depends on when it was minted. Anything 1971-present is only worth face value. Kennedy halves from 1965-70 are worth around $5, and anything 1964 or earlier is worth at least $12.
About $2.50 just for the silver. All Kennedy half dollars from 1965-1970 are 40% silver. Only the 1964 is 90%
Daniel Boone - 1964 Fifty Rifles 2-25 was released on: USA: 10 March 1966
If it's a 1964, it's 90% silver and worth a little over $10. If it's 1965-70, it's 40% silver and worth around $4.
The 1964 is worth about $1200, and '65-70 are worth about $500.
Something Worth Fighting For - 1964 was released on: USA: 7 June 1964
Even Mint State 1964 90% silver Kennedy half dollars are considered very common. Retail values on average are $17.00, which is only about 2 dollars more than the silver value.
There were 20,000,000 Ecuador 10 Centavos coins produced in 1964. The coin (KM#76c) weighs 2.8 grams, measures 19.3mm in diameter, is made of nickel clad steel, and is worth about US$0.20 in Extremely Fine condition and about US$0.75 in Uncirculated condition. The sucre (comprised of 100 centavos) was replaced by the US dollar in the year 2000 at a rate of 25,000 sucres to the dollar. Thus the nominal face value of your coin equates to 1/2500 of a US cent.