Want this question answered?
No.
Wrong president. Franklin Delano Roosevelt has been on the dimes since l945, replacing the earlier Mercury dime.
The gold dime was made in June of 1938 and was discontinued in August of the same year. Only 300 dimes were made.
The designer of the Winged Liberty Dime, more commonly called the Mercury Dime, Adolph Weinman, never said who the model was and no one has ever claimed to have been her. However, some evidence has been set forth indicating it may have been a woman named Elsie Stevens who was the wife of lawyer and poet Wallace Stevens.
The Mercury Dime was minted in all three mints, Philadelphia, Denver, and San Francisco. Not all three mints minted the Mercury dime every year. There were no Mercury dimes from the Denver mint in 1923-D or 1930-D. If you ever see one, it's a counterfeit coin. There was never a 1934-S dime minted either.
What ever happened to Paul the carpenter on Divine Design? I really liked the old cast.
What ever happened to Paul the carpenter on Divine Design? I really liked the old cast.
No.
yes
Washington was never on the US dime. Franklin Roosevelt is the only president ever depicted on the US dime, from 1946 to the present.
No. Franklin Roosevelt is the only president ever depicted on the US dime, from 1946 to the present.
No. The Mayan apoctilypto never happened.
JFK was an infant in 1917 so there is no possible way his picture would have been on a dime. All dimes minted up to 1945 carry a picture of Miss Liberty. Dimes made after that have a portrait of Franklin D. Roosevelt. Please determine what you have and post a new question.
Wrong president. Franklin Delano Roosevelt has been on the dimes since l945, replacing the earlier Mercury dime.
The gold dime was made in June of 1938 and was discontinued in August of the same year. Only 300 dimes were made.
The designer of the Winged Liberty Dime, more commonly called the Mercury Dime, Adolph Weinman, never said who the model was and no one has ever claimed to have been her. However, some evidence has been set forth indicating it may have been a woman named Elsie Stevens who was the wife of lawyer and poet Wallace Stevens.
they centered on crops and what ever they could make dime for