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Pre-1965 U.S. dimes are made of coin silver (900 fine), not sterling silver. In any case your coin is worth about $1 for its silver content.
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I have found a Calvin Coolidge coin of some type. Has picture of Coolidge and brief bio on the back of coin. Any idea what this coin is and when it was made? WHAT IT WORTH
Yes
Nope. They are worth the same as any other coin. They were made in the millions and are not rare.
Defenitly. Any coin with a gold content is worth way more than face value.
Gold is sold by the ounce, ergo, whatever coin you possess is worth at a minimum its weight in ounces. On the other hand, the coin itself might be worth more as a coin if it came from any significant era in history. But if you have a modern US, Canadian, Australian or New Zealand $1 coin, none of these contain any gold. They're just brass and only worth face value.
Pre-1965 U.S. dimes are made of coin silver (900 fine), not sterling silver. In any case your coin is worth about $1 for its silver content.
I personally don't think that it is worth anything because then, it would be fake money. Fake money is not worth anything. But if they don't notice the mistake, then it would have the same value as any ordinary 1924 1 coin.
actually a good condition coin if it has no dents or anything that is in good condition could be worth any where from $50-$200 dollars...i also read that some are worth over $1000.
Yes, this may be worth a lot. Check with any coin dealer to find out what it appraises for.
Post new question with a denomination. ALL US coins have the word LIBERTY on them.
no
I have found a Calvin Coolidge coin of some type. Has picture of Coolidge and brief bio on the back of coin. Any idea what this coin is and when it was made? WHAT IT WORTH
There has been no silver in any circulating British "silver" coin since 1946. British silver coins dating back over 1,000 years could worth anything depending on the year, the denomination, the design, the method of minting and the condition of the coin.
If it has been modified (soldered, holed) no. And in any case, if it's a modern (1971 or later) 2p coin, it's only worth face value - that's 4¢ U.S.
It's not real, because the U.S. never minted a coin with that design. It's a Chinese-made novelty, it doesn't contain any silver, and it's not worth anything.