Yes, and it isn't rare and only worth 5 cents.
No, a 1965 nickel is not made of silver. Nickels minted in 1965 are composed of a copper-nickel alloy, consisting of 75% copper and 25% nickel. Silver nickels were produced from 1942 to 1945 during World War II due to a shortage of nickel for the war effort.
The same thing they were made of in 1965 a copper nickel alloy of .750 copper & .250 nickel on the outer layers bonded to a core of pure copper.
around 50 cents
No, all coins are copper-nickel.
All circulating quarters dated 1965 and later are made of copper-nickel, not silver.
Copper-nickel coins for the dime and quarter started with coins dated 1965. The half-dollar remained 40% silver from 1965-1970 when it was changed in 1971 to copper-nickel removing all the silver of it.
The 1965 'Churchill' Crown was mass produced in 1965. 19,640,000 were struck in cupro-nickel (an alloy of copper and nickel). They are worth today (September 2010) between 50p and £1 depending on condition.
In average condition, both coins are only worth their face value.
Since 1965, U.S. quarters have been made of nickel-coated copper (91.67% copper and 8.33% nickel).
No. Nickels from 1866-1942 and 1945-present are 25% nickel and 75% copper. Dimes from 1965-present are made of a copper-nickel "sandwich" composition.
There can't be a 1966-S nickel because the Mint didn't use any mint marks from 1965 to 1967.
Five cents. It's an ordinary circulation coin