Please check again and post a new question. The first Roosevelt dimes were made in 1946. FDR didn't even become president till 1932. Also, the dimes minted back then were known as the "Barber" dime.
1902 and 1907 silver dimes
It is FDR on the dime, not Eisenhower. All Roosevelt dimes are common and only worth silver melt value. At the time of writing it is around $2.25 or so in silver.
Uh, Dwight Eisenhower was (a) President and (b) very much alive in 1953 so legally his picture couldn't be used on any coin. The dime carried, as it still does, a portrait of Franklin D. Roosevelt.
10 cents.
The only president whose picture ever appeared (and still does) on a US dime is Franklin Roosevelt. President Eisenhower's portrait was used on $1 coins dated 1971 to 1978.In any case, if you have a Roosevelt dime dated between 1946 and 1964, it contains 2.25 gm of pure silver alloyed with 0.25 gm of copper. At mid-2011 prices the silver is worth about $2.75 retail. However, depending on date, mint mark, and condition the coin could be worth more to a collector.
No such coin exist. No 1907 US one dollar coins were made and Roosevelt is only on the dime.
If you have a 1940 Roosevelt dime it is fake. The Roosevelt dime was not produced by the US Mint until 1946.
Mercury dimes were struck from 1916-1945. A 1907 dime is called a Barber (1892-1916) dime. It's a common date coin with a average value of $3.00.
It's a Roosevelt dime not a liberty dime and all are considered common, value is about $2.00
It's a Roosevelt dime not a JS dime and all are considered common, value is about $2.00.
10 cents.
They don't exist, the first Roosevelt dime was 1946. With a date of 1940 the dime is a MERCURY dime and is common with average values of $1.00-$3.00 depending on condition.
It's a common date Roosevelt dime, just spend it.
1902 and 1907 silver dimes
A proof coin has a retail value of about $1.00
The 1965 dime is a Roosevelt dime. This dime does not carry a mint mark and there were 1,652, 140,000 of them minted in the U.S. They have a value of between 10 cents and 2 dollars.
$1.22 on November 4, 2017.