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Circulated coins are 1 or 2 dollars uncirculated coins about 8 dollars
See this page: http://cointrackers.com/coins/148/1945-mercury-dime/ for what the 1945 "mercury" or "winged liberty" dime looks like.
The coins are referred to as Walking Liberty half dollars and regardless of year or mint marks from 1940 to 1945 the values are the same at $8.00-$9.00 for circulated coins
3 to10 cents at the most for average coins, uncirculated coins are 50 cents to a dollar
Sorry, no such US coins exists.
Heiligenbeil Pocket happened on 1945-01-26.
Many coins were minted for India in 1945. It is probably not rare.
He slept up to the present
In the Philippines the last year of silver coins was ... 1945 10 centavos 1945 20 centavos 1947 50 centavos 1967 1 peso
5¢. Please check your pocket change. Billions of nickels were minted* in 1964 to help alleviate coin shortages during the changeover from silver to cupronickel in higher denominations. That date remains one of the most common in circulation prior to coins minted in the 1990s and 2000s. (*) FWIW #1, coins are said to be minted or struck. "Stamped" usually refers to industrial items like spoons and fenders. FWIW #2, nickels struck at Philadelphia in 1964 did not have a P mint mark. That letter has been used on nickels only from mid-1942 to 1945, and again from 1980 to the present.
Richard A. Briggs has written: 'The Battle of the Ruhr Pocket' -- subject(s): Ruhr Pocket, Battle of the, Germany, 1945
No dollar coins were made after 1935, Please look at the coins denomination again.
3 to10 cents at the most for average coins, uncirculated coins are 50 cents to a dollar
Circulated coins are 1 or 2 dollars uncirculated coins about 8 dollars
Sorry, no such US Coins exists.
That's the mint mark. It tells where the coin was minted. Many but not all coins carry a mint mark. Coins without a mint mark are from Philadelphia. S = San Francisco D = Denver (1906-present) P = Philadelphia (1980-present, 1942-1945 on nickels) O = New Orleans CC = Carson City plus a few other branch mints that only struck gold coins
See this page: http://cointrackers.com/coins/148/1945-mercury-dime/ for what the 1945 "mercury" or "winged liberty" dime looks like.