Circulated coins are still valued at $2.00-$9.00 depending on grade.
1937 Mercury Dimes were minted at Philadelphia (dimes which have no mint mark), at Denver (dimes which have a D mint mark), at San Francisco (dimes which have a S mint mark). There is no W mint mark on a dime in 1937.MintmarkThe "W" you see on the front of the coin is actually a combined "AW" monogram for the coin's designer, Adolph Weinman. This monogram appears on all Mercury dimes, regardless of where they were minted. Mintmark ContinuedThe mint mark would be located on the reverse side of the dimeLook for the phrase at the bottome " ONE DIME"The mark should be after ONE
You have a Barber dime; Mercury dimes started in 1916. The value depends on its grade & mint mark, but it's worth at least $4.00 just for the silver.
All Mercury dimes from 1940 to 1945 regardless of mintmarks in average circulated condition have the same retail value of $2.00 At that time Philadelphia didn't put the "P" mint mark on coins struck there, so your coin is from that Mint.
It's not that simple. It depends on the coin's date and condition. Sometimes Mercury dimes from Denver are the most valuable, sometimes San Francisco. See the link page below for prices by mint mark and condition.
Please check your coins date again as there were no Mercury dimes made until 1916 and the "W" you are seeing is the designers initials AW which appears as a "W" at a casual glance.
1937 Mercury Dimes were minted at Philadelphia (dimes which have no mint mark), at Denver (dimes which have a D mint mark), at San Francisco (dimes which have a S mint mark). There is no W mint mark on a dime in 1937.MintmarkThe "W" you see on the front of the coin is actually a combined "AW" monogram for the coin's designer, Adolph Weinman. This monogram appears on all Mercury dimes, regardless of where they were minted. Mintmark ContinuedThe mint mark would be located on the reverse side of the dimeLook for the phrase at the bottome " ONE DIME"The mark should be after ONE
Roosevelt appered on the dime for the first time in 1946. The 1937-D Mercury Dime is not rare and most show heavy wear and are valued at $2.00-$9.00
You have a Barber dime; Mercury dimes started in 1916. The value depends on its grade & mint mark, but it's worth at least $4.00 just for the silver.
All Mercury dimes from 1940 to 1945 regardless of mintmarks in average circulated condition have the same retail value of $2.00 At that time Philadelphia didn't put the "P" mint mark on coins struck there, so your coin is from that Mint.
Yes, many. > Any dime dated 1964 or earlier is made of a 90% silver alloy so its melt value is about 0.07 times the current price of 1 troy ounce of silver. > Early-date Roosevelt dimes and nearly all Mercury dimes have a collector value of at least $2 or $3. Mercury dimes' values can be considerably higher, depending on their date, mint mark, and condition. > Older dimes (Barber, Liberty seated, etc.) can bring a significant premium depending again on date, mint mark, and condition.
The "W" you see is the designer's monogram, Adolph Weinman not a West Point mintmark. All Mercury dimes have it. Mintmarks for this series of dimes are on the reverse to the right of the "E" in the word "ONE". 1920 is a common date and most coins are valued just for the silver at $1.00.
It's not that simple. It depends on the coin's date and condition. Sometimes Mercury dimes from Denver are the most valuable, sometimes San Francisco. See the link page below for prices by mint mark and condition.
Please check your coins date again as there were no Mercury dimes made until 1916 and the "W" you are seeing is the designers initials AW which appears as a "W" at a casual glance.
"Mercury" dimes were minted from 1916 to 1945.Standing Liberty quarters were minted from 1916 to 1930.Please check again and post a new question with the coin's date and mint mark.
It's actually AW, this is the monogram of the designer A.A. Weinman and all Mercury Head dimes have it. It's not a mintmark. A 1940 Mercury dime is very common, if it's circulated the value is for the silver, about $2.00.
The mint mark position on all Mercury dimes is to the right of the E in the word ONE on the reverse of the coin. No mint mark = Philadelphia D = Denver S = San Francisco
Mercury dimes from 1940 to 1945 regardless of mintmark's in average circulated condition have the same retail value of $2.00. It may be worth more depending on the grade of the coin.