It is FDR on the dime, not Eisenhower. All Roosevelt dimes are common and only worth silver melt value. At the time of writing it is around $2.25 or so in silver.
The Denver mint did not strike any silver dollars in 1928. You may have a 1928-S where the S is indistinct. This coin is worth $20 to $30 depending on condition.
The US has never made and never will make silver pennies. If a penny was silver it would be worth more than a dime.
It is worth whatever melt is. The silver dollar is damaged and they never use rare dates (the 1928 peace dollar is rare, it is likely a 1928-S coin which is quite common) and so it would be worth about $20 for the coin. However, there is the question on whether the money clip itself is silver, usually the clip would be marked "STERLING" or 925 if it is silver. If the clip is silver, you have added value with whatever the weight of the silver clip is.
A 1928 US Peace Silver Dollar is worth approximately $20 to $130 if it is a coin that has been circulated. Uncirculated coins can command upwards of $600.
no such thing.
It is worth at least $3.50 in silver.
If it is a circulated dime, then it is worth about $1.00, mostly depending on the value of silver
About $2.00 just for the silver
G
It's just a silver Roosevelt dime worth about a dollar
A circulated 1939 US dime is worth about $2.70. An uncirculated US 1939 dime is worth between $9.00 and $20.00.
It isn't a liberty dime, it is a Roosevelt dime, it isn't silver and only worth 10 cents.
A 1959-D dime is 90% silver. It's very common and worth about $2.00.
A 1942 Mercury silver dime could be worth between $2.00 and $30.00 depending on its condition and grade.
The 1941 Mercury dime is very common, most are valued at $2.00 just for the silver.
About $2.20ish in silver scrap. They are common and only worth silver scrap regardless of condition.