The Lincoln Memorial is on the cent.
Lincoln's image is on the front of the penny, right? Jefferson is on the nickel and his home Monticello is on the back - it's even labelled!
The dime doesn't have a picture of a building on it. The penny used to have the Lincoln Memorial, and the nickel shows Monticello.
The Lincoln Memorial was built in comemoration of our sixteenth president. It is located in Washington D.C. and can be seen on the U.S. nickel.
I think you mean statue - a "statute" is a type of law. And I think you're confusing the nickel's reverse with the back of the penny as well.Monticello is Thomas Jefferson's home, so there's no statue in it or visible on the coin. However, the Lincoln Memorial cent, issued from 1959 to 2008, shows a tiny image of Lincoln inside the memorial. It represents the statue that we're all familiar with.
Lincolns memorial
It would depend on the coins' conditions, but the majority of Lincoln Memorial pennies in that date range retail for less than a nickel each in the lowest uncirculated grade (MS-60). The only outstandingly valuable one is an error coin, the so-called "1983 over 83" with a doubled date.
There's no such coin. Lincoln is on the penny.
The standard nickel has the Jefferson Memorial on the back of it. There have been a number of new nickels issued with other pictures.
Lincoln is not on the nickel. Do you perhaps have a penny instead?
OK, it's not Lincoln, he is only on the penny. With a date of 1903 it's a Liberty Head nickel an has a value of $3.00-$5.00 in circulated condition
The 1943 Lincoln cent is zinc coated steel not nickel and copper.
The 1943 Lincoln cent is zinc coated steel not nickel and average values are 5 to 10 cents
The 1943 Lincoln cent was made of steel, not the nickel. Do a Google search to find the picture you want.