It was minted in Philadelphia.
The letter D means it was minted at the Denver Mint.
Cents struck at the Philadelphia mint don't have a mint mark.
if you earn a penny and you save it
The letter "d" comes from the greek word "dam" and a first look at the word from peter stuyvesant made it clear that it should be minted into the penny
It means the coin was struck in San Francisco. D = Denver No letter = Philadelphia (all other denominations since 1980 use P, though)
The letter D means it was minted at the Denver Mint.
The lack of a mint mark indicates that it was minted in Philadelphia.
A Lincoln cent without a mintmark was struck at the Philadelphia Mint. The Mint does not use "P" mintmarks on penny's.
Yes, it doesnt cost a penny.
it doesnt melt, but it gets very clean!
It doesnt work very well.
well when you find a penny on the floor it is meant to be lucky ... because this could buy the poor peoples bread in the olden times helpin them just get through the day .... but now a penny doesnt mean much bet when you give it to a friend you may get a gift from god .. ooo ... best get looking .. o yes im good
Cents struck at the Philadelphia mint don't have a mint mark.
No, it just means who ever sent it want to make absolutly sure you get it...doesnt mean you are in trouble.
its a mint mark, the letter indicates where the coin was made P = Philadelphia, D = Denver
If you mean it does not have a "D" or "S" mintmark . It was made at the Philadelphia Mint. No U.S. one cent coin has ever had a "P" mintmark.
The letter on a penny refers to the mint at which it was manufactured. P is Philadelphia, D is Denver.