That would be the Liberty nickel, minted from 1883 through 1912. V is Roman for 5.
The V on the back suggests the coin is actually a nickel, as V is the Roman numeral for 5. If this is the case, the coin is NOT silver, and values start at around $5 depending on condition.
The coin is a 1902 Liberty Head Nickel, the "V" on the back is the Roman numeral 5 and the date is not rare for these coins, in average condition values are $1.00-$3.00
i have a 1952 south African coin with george v on the face and a ship on the back saying 1952 south African i have a 1952 south African coin with george v on the face and a ship on the back saying 1952 south African
That would be known as a "V" or Liberty nickel. The V is the roman numeral for 5 because the nickel is worth 5 cents.
Copper-nickel, not silver E Pluribus Unum, not "You Pluribus Unum" Your coin has a V on it because V is the Roman numeral for 5, so you have a 5-cent piece. See the Related Question for more details.
It's on the back, above the V, below the words "States Of." If the coin is heavily worn, the wording might not be legible anymore.
V coin does not describe a coin. Please be more specific.
V Norge coin? I don't think i get you answer... are you thinking about a coin from HM. King Olav V(V=the 5th.) ? the value depends hov much the coin is and what year it has been made... ;)
A 1905 V coin is a Liberty Head nickel, the "V" is the Roman numeral 5.
Not "the" coin, but "a" coin. And the "V" isn't for Queen Victoria, either. After all, why would an AMERICAN coin have a picture of the BRITISH queen on it? Anyway, remember Roman numerals from grade school? V stands for 5, so you have a 5 cent piece, otherwise called a Liberty nickel. There's more info at the Related Question.
Remember Roman numerals? V = 5, so you have a nickel. There's more information at the Related Question.
Between $3 and $21.6. In the future please add a condition of the coin so I can value it more precisely for you.