Uh....
NO American coins say "100 cents" on them. And ALL American coins have the motto E Pluribus Unum on them.
So please go back and look at what you have and post a new, separate question with enough details to ID the coin.
"E Pluribus Unum" is latin for "Out of many, One" and is the legend found on all US coins since the early 1800's. To value your coin, the denomination (e.g., one cent, five cents, ten cents, etc.) and condition would need to be known.
PHRASE, not "phase"E Pluribus Unum, not "pluribus unum"The words mean "Out of many, one" and appear on ALL American coins.
THE MOTTO E PLURIBUS UNUM is on all modern US coins an IS NOT A TYPE COIN you have a SBA dollar coin that is still in circulation today.
They're called Lincoln cents. ALL American coins have the motto E Pluribus Unum on them so that's too general to ID a specific coin. Please see the Related Question for more information.
They're called Lincoln cents. ALL American coins have the motto E Pluribus Unum on them so that's too general to ID a specific coin. Please see the Related Question for more information.
All wheat penny's have the motto E PLURIBUS UNUM on them so it adds nothing to the value. Depending on coindition the coin may have a value of 3 to 25 cents
5 cents
No such thing as a E-PLURIBUS-UNUM coin of any kind. The coin is a MORGAN dollar, the motto E PLURIBUS UNUM is on all the Morgans from 1878 to 1904 and 1921. Post new question with a DATE.
Its 1$
No such thing as a E-PLURIBUS-UNUM coin of any type. Because the national motto E PLURIBUS UNUM is on all most every US coin ever made.
No such thing as a E-PLURIBUS-UNUM coin of any type. Because the national motto E PLURIBUS UNUM is on all most every US coin ever made.
"E Pluribus Unum" is latin for "Out of many, One" and is the legend found on all US coins since the early 1800's. To value your coin, the denomination (e.g., one cent, five cents, ten cents, etc.) and condition would need to be known.
PHRASE, not "phase"E Pluribus Unum, not "pluribus unum"The words mean "Out of many, one" and appear on ALL American coins.
THE MOTTO E PLURIBUS UNUM is on all modern US coins an IS NOT A TYPE COIN you have a SBA dollar coin that is still in circulation today.
They're called Lincoln cents. ALL American coins have the motto E Pluribus Unum on them so that's too general to ID a specific coin. Please see the Related Question for more information.
They're called Lincoln cents. ALL American coins have the motto E Pluribus Unum on them so that's too general to ID a specific coin. Please see the Related Question for more information.
They're called Lincoln cents. ALL American coins have the motto E Pluribus Unum on them so that's too general to ID a specific coin. Please see the Related Question for more information.