It's still worth 5 cents.
A US nickel dated 1962 contains no silver - it is 25% nickel and 75% copper.
Priceless. The first Jefferson nickel was dated 1938.
No U.S. Nickels are dated 1700. The first nickel was issued in 1866.
The first US nickel was dated 1866 so this can't be a nickel, please look at the date again and post a new question.
VDB is a designation for some 1909 dated cents it has nothing to do with nickels and there is no such thing as a VDB nickel.
The last Indian Head Nickel was dated 1938. Post new question.
You have a Liberty Head Nickel dated 1909, the V on the reverse is the Roman numeral 5. Coins in average condition have values of $1.00-$3.00
Check that coin again. The buffalo nickel wasn't first minted until 1913, and the first nickel wasn't introduced until 1866.
Anything dated 1965 and after is copper and nickel, no silver.
A US Indian Head nickel dated 1930 is common, coins in average circulated grades sell of $1.00-$3.00
The U.S. mint did not issue a nickel with a buffalo on it in 1867.
For circulating US currency, half-dollars, quarters and dimes were last struck in 90% silver on coins dated 1964. Starting with coins dated 1965, dimes and quarters are copper-nickel. However, half-dollars dated 1965-1970 are 40% silver. Half-dollars dated 1971-present are copper-nickel.