A 1944 Mercury dime is fairly common with the mintage being around 231 million. I see them on eBay from $2 to $54 depending on the condition.
A US dime dated 1944 is a Mercury head dime, it's very common with a value of $2.00 just for the silver.
A US dime dated 1944 is a Mercury head dime, it's very common with a likely value of $2.00 just for the silver.
There are no US dimes dated 1812.
The value of a US dime marked "ten centavos" is zero, since it is a fake. A real US dime is marked "one dime," not "ten centavos."
The US didn't mint any dimes dated 1817.
The US didn't make any dimes dated 1812.
1943 is a very common Mercury Head dime. Most are only valued for the silver, about $2.00.
Sorry, you need to look at the coin again, no US dimes exist dated 1819.
1939 is a very common date Mercury Head dime. Most are only valued for the silver, about $2.00.
Please check again and post a new question. It's either not 1932, not a half dime, or not from the US. The last US half dimes were dated 1873.
The US has never produced a "Indian Head Dime" of any type. A US dime dated 1914 is of the Barber series of coins. A coin in average collectible condition is $3.00-$5.00.
The question isn't clear. There were no 1919-dated $2 bills, and there is nothing called a "dime $2 bill".