I suppose you're meaning the letter under the date on a coin??? "D" is for Denver, "P" is for Philadelphia. That indicates the mint that stamped the coin. It is also possible to have an "S" for San Francisco, or a "W" for West Point. On older coins you could also have an "O" for New Orleans, a "CC" for Carson City, a "C" for Charlotte, or a "D" for Dahlonega (on early gold coins).
The "D" indicates the coin was minted in the Denver mint
"D" under the date on a Lincoln penny denotes it was minted in Denver.What_does_the_D_mean_on_a_US_pennyWhat_does_the_D_mean_on_a_US_penny
under the date
It's the year that the coin was minted. If you look under the date you can tell where it was minted, too: "D" = Denver Mint "S" = San Francisco No letter = Philadelphia
If you mean a "D" under the date, it's not an error, it's the Denver mintmark were the coin was made.
D: minted in Denver. P: minted in Philadelphia.
does it have a letter under the date?? Yes, D
The mint mark is under the date, and there is no silver in the coin actually the d is above the year.
If it has a mintmark its on the reverse under the wreath, it can only be a D or S.
It means that the coin was made at the Denver mint.
Look under the date for a P or a D. P=Philadelphia mintage D=Denver mintage
The "D" means it was struck at the Denver Mint and its value is 3 to 10 cents