Missing numbers & letters on coins is a common error that's caused by grease or tiny pieces of metal filling in areas of the dies and for most coins does not add to the value.
Missing numbers & letters on coins is a common error that's caused by grease or tiny pieces of metal filling in areas of the dies and for most coins does not add to the value.
Missing numbers & letters on coins is a common error that's caused by grease or tiny pieces of metal filling in areas of the dies and for most coins does not add to the value.
All US coins dated 1804 except the Cent & Half-Cent have the motto E PLURIBUS UNUM, more information is needed.
It's a 2009 Lincoln bicentennial cent and most are only face value.
1961
Missing numbers & letters on coins is a common error that's caused by grease or tiny pieces of metal filling in areas of the dies and for most coins does not add to the value.
Missing numbers & letters on coins is a common error that's caused by grease or tiny pieces of metal filling in areas of the dies and for most coins does not add to the value.
This is a very common die error caused by a filled die it adds nothing to the value that is likely one cent.
Missing numbers & letters on coins is a common error that's caused by grease or tiny pieces of metal filling in areas of the dies and for most coins does not add to the value.
All US coins dated 1804 except the Cent & Half-Cent have the motto E PLURIBUS UNUM, more information is needed.
The 1961 Lincoln cent is very common and still in circulation. It's one cent.
If the question was supposed to ask about the coin's value, it's worth one cent.
5 cents
A five cent coin from 2005 is worth five cents.
Both "E Pluribus Unum" and "In God We Trust" had appeared previously on other denominations, but the Lincoln cent was the first time those mottoes appeared on the 1-cent coin.
In French, "1961" is pronounced as "mille neuf cent soixante et un."
The motto E PLURIBUS UNUM is on all modern US coins, this coin is a 2009 Lincoln Bicentennial cent and likely only face value.