August 15, 2009 To see a photgraph of the 1910 Barber Dime, click on the link named "1910 BARBER DIME" in the "RELATED LINKS" section located along the left side of this box. The 1910 Barber Dime was produced at 3 US mints: Philadelphia which is shown as 1910-P in this list, Denver which is shown as 1910-D in this list and San Francisco which is shown as 1910-S in this list. To determine which coin you have it is necessary to locate the mint mark. This mark consists of a small letter located on the reverse [tails] side of the coin just below the wreath. The letter "D" is for Denver. The letter "S" is for San Francisco. If there is no letter the coin was minted at Philadelphia. The most common circulated and uncirculated values of these coins are shown in the following list: Circulated Grades...........1915-P.........1915-D.......1915-S G4.....................................$5................$6...............$8 F12...................................$8.................$12.............$54 EF40.................................$30...............$50.............$115 AU55.................................$70...............$110...........$210 Uncirculated GradesMS60................................$110..............$235..............$465 MS63................................$200..............$450..............$760 MS64................................$325..............$725..............$1,275 MS65................................$650..............$1,700...........$2,300
The coin was designed by Charles Barber, not George Morgan. The V stands for 5 in Roman numerals (remember them?) so you have a nickel. Please see the Related Question for more.
Your dime is normally called a Barber dime after its designer. All Barber dimes from 1892 to 1916 used the same design. There's an excellent picture at the link below
There's no dime called a "wheat dime". There are the famous wheat CENTS, of course, that carry the images of two wheat ears on the back, but a 1910 dime has a wreath on the back and is frequently called a Barber dime after its designer Charles Barber.
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Most Barber dimes show very heavy wear and the date 1910 is common with values of $2.00-$4.00 in average condition. Better circulated coins run $7.00-$15.00. Mint sate coins are $50.00+
Mercury dimes were minted from 1916 to 1945. Your coin is called a Barber dime, after its designer Charles Barber.
The coin was designed by Charles Barber, not George Morgan. The V stands for 5 in Roman numerals (remember them?) so you have a nickel. Please see the Related Question for more.
Your dime is normally called a Barber dime after its designer. All Barber dimes from 1892 to 1916 used the same design. There's an excellent picture at the link below
Samuel Barber was born on March 9, 1910.
Samuel Barber was born on March 9, 1910.
Charlie Barber died on 1910-11-23.
There's no dime called a "wheat dime". There are the famous wheat CENTS, of course, that carry the images of two wheat ears on the back, but a 1910 dime has a wreath on the back and is frequently called a Barber dime after its designer Charles Barber.
You possess a Barber Dime - a 1910 coin in good condition (G4) is worth: $3.00; if its mint state is MS60, the value rises to: $100.00.
2000.00
A worn coin is worth less than $1.00 USD. Well preserved: $3
Charlie Barber died November 23, 1910, in Philadelphia, PA, USA.
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