The US dime produced in 1807 was known as a "Draped Bust" dime, and would not be mistaken for an Indian head. In fact, I am not aware of any US dime that could be referred to as an "Indian head" dime.
The US has never produced a "Indian Head Dime" of any type. A US dime dated 1914 is of the Barber series of coins. A coin in average collectible condition is $3.00-$5.00.
The US never minted an "Indian head" dime. The only low-denomination coins with an Indian head design were cents (1859-1909) and nickels (1913-1938) neither of which was minted in 1944 or could be mistaken for a dime. Please check what you have and post a new question.
A US dime dated 1944 is a Mercury head dime, it's very common with a value of $2.00 just for the silver.
A US dime dated 1944 is a Mercury head dime, it's very common with a likely value of $2.00 just for the silver.
The US dime produced in 1807 was known as a "Draped Bust" dime, and would not be mistaken for an Indian head. In fact, I am not aware of any US dime that could be referred to as an "Indian head" dime.
The US has never produced a "Indian Head Dime" of any type. A US dime dated 1914 is of the Barber series of coins. A coin in average collectible condition is $3.00-$5.00.
The US never minted an "Indian head" dime. The only low-denomination coins with an Indian head design were cents (1859-1909) and nickels (1913-1938) neither of which was minted in 1944 or could be mistaken for a dime. Please check what you have and post a new question.
Please be more specific and post new question with a date, no US Indian Head dimes were made.
A US dime dated 1944 is a Mercury head dime, it's very common with a value of $2.00 just for the silver.
Washington was never on the US dime. Franklin Roosevelt is the only president ever depicted on the US dime, from 1946 to the present.
A US dime dated 1944 is a Mercury head dime, it's very common with a likely value of $2.00 just for the silver.
The US never minted an "Indian head" dime. The only low-denomination coins with an Indian head design were cents from 1859 to 1909 and nickels from 1913 to 1938. All dimes from mid-1916 to 1945 carried the famous "Mercury" design. In addition there were no 1933 dimes of any design. The only 1933-dated circulation coins were cents and half dollars. Other denominations weren't issued due to the Depression.
No. Franklin Roosevelt is the only president ever depicted on the US dime, from 1946 to the present.
1943 is a very common Mercury Head dime. Most are only valued for the silver, about $2.00.
There's no US dime called a "Victory" dime. All 1908 US dimes carry a portrait of Miss Liberty on the front and the words ONE DIME on the back. They're called Liberty dimes or more commonly "Barber" dimes after Charles Barber, the artist who designed them. You may be confusing the coin with a 1908 Liberty Head coin that has the letter V on the back. The reason that coin is the size of a nickel is that it IS a nickel, and the letter V is the Roman numeral for 5, not an abbreviation for Victory. There's more information at the Related Questions.
1939 is a very common date Mercury Head dime. Most are only valued for the silver, about $2.00.