This is an attractive little medallion commemorating the opening of the fourth residence of the Philadelphia Mint. It is bronze, common, worth very little and attractive if somewhat plain. There is an eagle on the obverse with a map of the continental US in front of it. The reverse is an image of the mint itself.
August 1, 2009 1969 Lincoln Cents with no mint mark were produced at the Philadelphia Mint. In circulated condition it is valued from 2 cents to 10 cents depending upon the actual condition of the coin. In uncirculated condition it is valued from $4 to $12 depending upon the actual condition of the coin.
You don't give a denomination but the only 1969 coin that is above face value is the Kennedy half dollar, its 40% silver and worth about $2.00 just for the silver.
If your coin does not have a mint mark then it means it was minted at the Philadelphia mint. These coins are usually not as rare. However recently P mint marks were added to coins to indicate that they were made at the Philadelphia mint.
Coins made at the Philadelphia mint did not have mint marks until the 1980s. Your coin was made at the Philadelphia mint.
The "P" on US change stands for the Philadelphia Mint. It indicates that the coin was minted in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The Philadelphia Mint is one of the four United States Mint facilities that produce coins and other related items.
This is a U.S. Mint token that was included in Uncirculated Mint sets sold by the Mint for a few years. It's NOT a coin and does not have any real value to a collector.
That depends on the denomination of coin.
August 1, 2009 1969 Lincoln Cents with no mint mark were produced at the Philadelphia Mint. In circulated condition it is valued from 2 cents to 10 cents depending upon the actual condition of the coin. In uncirculated condition it is valued from $4 to $12 depending upon the actual condition of the coin.
A Philadelphia coin known as a Philadelphia mint is a coint that is made that has a P on it for penny. The Philadelphia mint coin is worth about one sent.
There is not always a mint mark on coins. If your coin does not have a mintmark it means that it was made at the Philadelphia mint in Pennsylvania.
You don't give a denomination but the only 1969 coin that is above face value is the Kennedy half dollar, its 40% silver and worth about $2.00 just for the silver.
If your coin does not have a mint mark then it means it was minted at the Philadelphia mint. These coins are usually not as rare. However recently P mint marks were added to coins to indicate that they were made at the Philadelphia mint.
Coins made at the Philadelphia mint did not have mint marks until the 1980s. Your coin was made at the Philadelphia mint.
If there isn't a mint mark on a US coin, usually it means that such a coin was minted in Philadelphia.
Then your coin was minted at the Philadelphia mint. It isn't an error, most older coins show no mintmark if the coin was minted at the Philadelphia mint, pennies still don't show a mintmark for coins minted at the Philadelphia mint.
If a penny has no mint mark, it typically means it was produced by the Philadelphia Mint. Mint marks indicate where a coin was minted, and coins from the Philadelphia Mint, the oldest U.S. Mint facility, do not have a mint mark.
Philadelphia Mint