One cent.
It was probably plated for use in jewelry or similar. It has no special value to collectors, however.
Neither Canada nor the US ever made a silver penny. Silver has always been too expensive for such a low-denomination coin. Anything you have that appears to be silver is almost certainly an ordinary cent that was plated.
No. Canadian cents were made of bronze, and later made from copper-plated steel.
U.S. pennies have never contained silver. Your penny is probably silver plated for jewelry or other decorations.
The U.S. never minted a silver penny. It would have more than a dime's worth of silver in it. Your coin has been plated.
The U.S. has never made one cent (penny's) coins from silver. The coin has likely been silver plated. It is not rare or special, it's just a penny.
The only "silver" penny was minted in 1943 to support the war effort. Yours is probably zinc plated.
A 1973 silver penny was never minted or issued. There are some aroung, but they have been silver or nickel plated after they were put into circulation.
The U.S. never minted a silver penny. It would have more than a dime's worth of silver in it. Your coin has been plated.
One Cent is the value. The US has never made a silver penny. It may look like silver or have been silver plated but it has no collectible value.
They have never contained silver. Yours is probably silver plated for jewelry.
No US one cent coin was EVER struck in silver. It may have been plated or look like silver, but it's not silver. It's just a penny.
U.S. pennies have never contained silver. Your coin might be silver plated for jewelry or other decorations.