You can order these coins that have two heads or two tails. They are worth nothing other than the value of the coin. I have a two-tailed quarter which I thought might be worth a mint only to discover they are made and sold as novelty items. This is what I have discovered through research. You can call a coin collector and verify this information.
No, it's not possible that a double-headed quarter with two such diverse dates could be a legitimate Mint error. Dies are destroyed, if not worn out through usage, by the end of the year in which they are used. The coin in question is almost certainly a novelty or magician's coin.
the 4th does. the 25th does.
one centWell, not really...It's almost impossible to define an "average" one cent coin. The U.S. has made cents since 1793 at 3 different mints, and values range from a penny to 2/3 of a million dollars depending on the dates and conditions.If you're referring to modern cents, just about anything minted in the 1940s and 1950s will be worth 2 or 3 cents, and later than that, face value only. There are some exceptions; e.g. error coins such as a 1955 double-die cent
There are no such theories, at least not by sane people. There is no reason to believe that the digits of pi have anything to do with dates of important events.
The year 2025. Although 2020 will also start on a Wednesday, it is a leap year, so the calendar will be different.
JFK wasn't on the half dollar until 1964. If you have a double-headed coin with two different dates, it means someone cut up two coins and fastened them back together to make a trick coin.
To the best of my knowledge (and I have been collecting for almost 50 years) only one two-headed US Cent has been authenticated and it is an Indian Head from the 1860's. Search the web for Jakes Marketplace to find two-headed magicians coins. Double headed coins -- novelty items -- are manufactured from normal coins, so they can exist for any year. A lot of them actually have different dates on each side. There are no records anywhere to keep track of which years exist -- it would be impossible to keep track of that, since anybody with a lathe, a grinder, and some glue could make them.
Trust me, it is not authentic. The 1979 dies were destroyed 13 years before the 1993 dies were made.
Thick-Headed Tour - 2015 was released on: USA: December 2015
Two-Headed Giant - 1939 was released on: USA: 11 August 1939
The Red-Headed Monkey - 1950 was released on: USA: 7 July 1950
This is one of the most common questions on this site. They are a novelty item, usually called a magician's coin, that cost $8-$10 in novelty shops and $2-$3 on eBay (plus $8.50 shipping of course). However, in some cases double-headed coins are actually genuine, not magician's coins. They need to be weighed, of course, to prove that they are not fakes.
Branded - 1965 Headed for Doomsday 2-30 was released on: USA: 10 April 1966
Your Witness - 1949 The Case of the Red-Headed Corpse was released on: USA: 19 March 1950
Sabine and the Two-Headed Baby - 2004 was released on: USA: October 2004 (Hollywood Film Festival)
Hollywood Hillbillies - 2014 Headed for Hollywood - 1.1 was released on: USA: 21 January 2014
On a Train Headed West - 1992 was released on: USA: 29 May 1992 (American Film and Video Festival) (premiere)