It depends by what you mean by 1909. There are 4 varieties of 1909 wheat pennies. A 1909 with no mintmark and no "V.D.B." between the wheat stalks on the back of the coin is fairly common and sells for about $1 in circulated condition. If you have a 1909 with no mintmark with a "V.D.B." between the wheat stalks on the back of the coin it is worth about $9 or so in circulated condition. A 1909 with an S mintmark and no VDB sells for about $50 in circulated condition. While a 1909 with an S mintmark and a V.D.B. between the wheat stalks on the back of the penny sells for $500 or more in circulated condition. If you want to buy uncirculated coins, expect to pay many times the values I listed, especially for rarities like the 1909 S VDB
For regular issues, the 1909-S V.D.B., with a current retail price of about $1200. The only known example of a 1943-D Bronze cent recently sold for $1.7 Million
Check your coin again. Wheat pennies were made from 1909 till 1958.
Check the date again. Wheat pennies were made from 1909 till 1958.
Check the date again. Wheat pennies were made from 1909 till 1958.
The Lincoln Wheat cent wasn't introduced until 1909.
Yes. Wheat pennies were made 1909-1958. A wheat penny has wheat on the backside.
The Wheat Penny did not appear until 1909.
Was in the year 1909.
Wheat cents were made from 1909-1958
The first US wheat penny minted was the regular 1909.
For regular issues, the 1909-S V.D.B., with a current retail price of about $1200. The only known example of a 1943-D Bronze cent recently sold for $1.7 Million
there are no 1901 wheat cents wheat cents were made from 1909 to 1958 1901 is a indian head penny
1909
There's no such thing as an "Indian wheat" penny. Indian head cents were made from 1859 to 1909. Wheat cents were made from 1909 to 1958. There was an overlap in 1909 - both designs were issued that year.
Retail $3.00 in ANA Good condition, $6 in Almost Uncirculated, and $48 if certified MS-65.
In the U.S., from 1909 to 1958, the Wheat Penny was coined with Abraham Lincoln on the front, and ears of wheat on the back.
Wheat cents were struck from 1909 to 1958