It's called a mint mark, not a state mark. The lack of one indicates that the coin was minted in Philadelphia.
The letter is known as the mint-mark and tells where the coin was made. A coin having a P mint-mark (or no mint-mark on some coins) was made in Philadelphia, a coin having an S Mint-mark was minted in San Fransisco, a coin with a D mint-mark was minted in Denver.
On an US coin it can mean "cents" or it can be the mint mark of the Charlotte Mint, which existed only from 1838 to 1861.
No mint mark indicates that the coin was minted in Philadelphia.
The lack of a mint mark usually indicates that the coin was minted in Philadelphia.
No such thing as a "Eagle Mark" on any US coin. If you mean a mintmark? They are little tiny letters on the reverse of the coin, and can only be a D or S on this coin.
The coin was minted in Philadelphia, PA.
On a US coin, D is the mint mark for Denver, CO (1906 and later) or Dahlonega, GA (1838-1861)
If you mean a mint mark on the reverse of the coin, it's a D or S but not a P. Please look at the coin again.
mint mark is to the left of the value on the reverse.
It's called a mint mark and indicates where the coin was minted. The mint mark 'D' stands for Denver.
The "D" mintmark means that it was produced in Denver, Colorado. The terms Uncirculated and Mint State mean the same. The coin has not been used, shows no sign of wear from being in circulation, as is from the Mint.
On a US coin, D is the mint mark for Denver, CO (1906 and later) or Dahlonega, GA (1838-1861)