Please look at the coin again and post new question, there is no such coin as a walking liberty nickel.
It's a Liberty Head Nickel not a Barber. The Barber series don't have nickels. Retail value for 1908 nickels are $3.00-$5.00 in circulated condition.
The 1908 Liberty Head nickel is a common coin, most are valued at $1.00-$3.00
Remember Roman numerals from elementary school? "V" = 5 so what you have is a nickel, normally called a Liberty nickel because it carries a portrait of Miss Liberty. There's more information at the Related Question.
All 1908 US nickels used the same design - Miss Liberty on the front and the Roman numeral "V" (5) on the back.Please check your coin again and post a new, separate question with more details that might help ID it.
All Liberty Head nickels were struck at Philadelphia, except for 1912. You may be seeing some damage or part of the design rather than a "D" mintmark.Please see the Related Question for more information.
It's a Liberty Head Nickel not a Barber. The Barber series don't have nickels. Retail value for 1908 nickels are $3.00-$5.00 in circulated condition.
The 1908 Liberty Head nickel is a common coin, most are valued at $1.00-$3.00
Remember Roman numerals from elementary school? "V" = 5 so what you have is a nickel, normally called a Liberty nickel because it carries a portrait of Miss Liberty. There's more information at the Related Question.
All 1908 US nickels used the same design - Miss Liberty on the front and the Roman numeral "V" (5) on the back.Please check your coin again and post a new, separate question with more details that might help ID it.
The 1908-S Barber Quarter in the grade of G-4 has a retail value of $18.00.
There's no US dime called a "Victory" dime. All 1908 US dimes carry a portrait of Miss Liberty on the front and the words ONE DIME on the back. They're called Liberty dimes or more commonly "Barber" dimes after Charles Barber, the artist who designed them. You may be confusing the coin with a 1908 Liberty Head coin that has the letter V on the back. The reason that coin is the size of a nickel is that it IS a nickel, and the letter V is the Roman numeral for 5, not an abbreviation for Victory. There's more information at the Related Questions.
Depends on overall condition and if the nickel is factory or after market. Range from 0-500 USD.
What denomination? Please post a new question with that important information.
All Liberty Head nickels were struck at Philadelphia, except for 1912. You may be seeing some damage or part of the design rather than a "D" mintmark.Please see the Related Question for more information.
Philadelphia the Cradle of Liberty - 1908 was released on: USA: 25 June 1908
US nickels only contained silver during WWII when nickel metal was needed for the war effort. ALL other nickels are made of an alloy of 75% copper and 25% nickel. Please see the Related Question.
The coin you have is a nickel, not a cent - remember Roman numerals? Anyway, its value ranges from $1.00 or so if worn, up to $8 or so if in almost-new condition.