1949, 1949 s, 1950 s, 1951 s, 1952 s
Most of the 1946-1964 90% Silver Dimes have common date values tied to the price of spot Silver. With the exception of the Low Mintage Dates consisting of 1946-S 27.9M, 1949-S 13.5M, 1950-S 20.4M and 1955-P,D,S with 12M-18.5M which increases their Numismatic value.
There is no such thing as a 1968 Liberty dime. Winged Liberty (Mercury) dimes stopped being minted in the mid-1940s. All 1968 dimes are Roosevelt Dimes, not silver, not rare, and are worth simply 10 cents unless in proof condition.
Silver (1946-1964) Roosevelt dimes are not rare. The 1948-Denver Mint issue is a high mintage common date. Average retail values are $3.00-$4.00 for circulated coins in collectible condition.
1960 is not a rare date for Roosevelt dimes. Circulated, its value is determined by the fact that it's made of 90% silver. The price of silver changes a lot, so the best way to determine its melt value is to take the current price of silver and multiply it by 0.072.
There really aren't any that could be considered rare. The things to look out for though are: 1964 and prior quarters, dimes and half dollars, these are 90% silver 1965-1970 half dollars, these are 40% silver. Other than that, there really aren't much that are rare, unless you want to count minor die varieties.
All 1965 U.S. dimes are Roosevelt dimes, so that's what it would look like. A very few 1965 US dimes were struck by mistake on 90% silver planchets that were used for 1964 silver dimes.
1964 was the last year for silver Roosevelt dimes. The "star" was added after the coin was struck at the Mint and is not a rare collectible coin, but it's still 10 cents.
Yes, all US dimes dated 1964 and before are 90% silver and worth about $2-3 in silver content. Similarly, there are a few "key date" dimes that are worth a lot more, for example the 1916-D Mercury dime is worth a few hundred to a few thousand dollars.
Most of the 1946-1964 90% Silver Dimes have common date values tied to the price of spot Silver. With the exception of the Low Mintage Dates consisting of 1946-S 27.9M, 1949-S 13.5M, 1950-S 20.4M and 1955-P,D,S with 12M-18.5M which increases their Numismatic value.
There is no such thing as a 1968 Liberty dime. Winged Liberty (Mercury) dimes stopped being minted in the mid-1940s. All 1968 dimes are Roosevelt Dimes, not silver, not rare, and are worth simply 10 cents unless in proof condition.
Silver (1946-1964) Roosevelt dimes are not rare. The 1948-Denver Mint issue is a high mintage common date. Average retail values are $3.00-$4.00 for circulated coins in collectible condition.
1960 is not a rare date for Roosevelt dimes. Circulated, its value is determined by the fact that it's made of 90% silver. The price of silver changes a lot, so the best way to determine its melt value is to take the current price of silver and multiply it by 0.072.
No, they are not rare, they are, however, worth more than face value (about $2.11 for each of them) simply because of the value of silver. In better condition some of the older ones may be worth more than just silver price.
It would be impossibly rare because the last Mercury head dimes were dated 1945. All dimes made since 1946 carry a picture of Franklin D. Roosevelt.
There really aren't any that could be considered rare. The things to look out for though are: 1964 and prior quarters, dimes and half dollars, these are 90% silver 1965-1970 half dollars, these are 40% silver. Other than that, there really aren't much that are rare, unless you want to count minor die varieties.
dimes made in the 1920's are called mercury dimes. they aren't that rare so most of them are only worth their silver content. which is around $1.20
1942 is not a rare date for Mercury dimes. In circulated condition, it has about 75 cents worth of silver in it. A nice uncirculated one is worth about $5