It was struck at the Denver Mint. Cents without mint marks were made at Philadelphia (and occasionally at West Point).
The "D" indicates the coin was minted in the Denver mint
No a 1973 penny will not have VDB.
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
They made more than a billion of them that year. It's worth one cent.
It was struck at the US Mint at Denver Colorado - D for Denver.
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
No a 1973 penny will not have VDB.
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
They made more than a billion of them that year. It's worth one cent.
no L must me an error on D possibly or worn
It means the coin was struck in San Francisco. D = Denver No letter = Philadelphia (all other denominations since 1980 use P, though)
The "D" on coins mean that it came from the Denver Mint.
The letter D is the mint mark for Denver.
If you mean a "D" under the date, it's not an error, it's the Denver mintmark were the coin was made.
It was struck at the US Mint at Denver Colorado - D for Denver.
The letter D means it was minted at the Denver Mint.