Monticello is the name of the home of Thomas Jefferson and is located in Charlottesville, Virginia. The building on the reverse side of the Jefferson Nickel is Monticello.
The symbol on the back of a nickel is Monticello. Monticello is the home President Thomas Jefferson, who is depicted on the front of the coin.
Unless it's proof or uncirculated, 5 cents. It's a Jefferson nickel not a Monticello nickel.
yes
That would be any Jefferson nickel dated 1938-2003 or 2006-present, as the coins feature Monticello on the reverse side (Monticello was Jefferson's house).
monticello
The symbol on the back of a nickel is Monticello. Monticello is the home President Thomas Jefferson, who is depicted on the front of the coin.
Unless it's proof or uncirculated, 5 cents. It's a Jefferson nickel not a Monticello nickel.
Monticello is the building on the reverse of the coin.
monticello
yes
That would be any Jefferson nickel dated 1938-2003 or 2006-present, as the coins feature Monticello on the reverse side (Monticello was Jefferson's house).
Monticello
monticello
The nickel. Monticello was Thomas Jefferson's home so it nicely complements his image on the front of the coin. Of course, if you look at the nickel you'll see that the building has the name MONTICELLO right underneath the picture!
Ask yourself which president lived at Monticello, and then ask which president is pictured on the front of the nickel. Hint - both questions have the same answer and his initials are T.J.
If it is a Mint error it may be worth a few dollars, take it to a coin dealer to see if it has any value.MoreIt's called a Jefferson nickel rather than a Monticello nickel. If by "double struck" you mean that Monticello is on both sides (which would account for the lack of a date) what you have is a novelty item called a magician's coin. There's more information at the question "What is a double headed nickel worth?"
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