Between $3 and $60. In the future please add a condition of the coin so I can value it more precisely for you.
Roosevelt was not pictured on a silver dollar. He was on a dime. Your coin could be a privately minted coin. If so it's only worth it's base metal value. Silver base medals are worth the most.
The words "copy" and "copper" are a giveaway. That means the coin is a replica, not a genuine item, and it's made of an inexpensive base metal so it has effectively no value either to collectors or a metal dealer.
The word COPY is a dead giveaway. Any copy of a real coin is only worth the value of the metal it contains, and usually they're made of inexpensive base metals. In any case, genuine 1943 steel cents can be bought in average condition for around 50 cents so there's no benefit to having a replica when the real thing is so inexpensive.
The word COPY means simply that - your coin is a replica, not an original, so it's only worth the value of the base metal that it's made of - perhaps a dollar or two.
It depends if it's struck in silver or base metal, take to a coin dealer but don't expect much.
Between $3 and $54. In the future please add a condition of the coin so I can value it more precisely for you.
I'm not sure what you mean by "base" penny. Anyway, values for the 3 mints are: No mint mark - retail would be about $1 in average circulated condition. H mint mark - $2 to $3 KN mint mark - $15. These prices increase significantly if the coin is not heavily worn.
The base word for penniless is penny.
George Moriarty played in 3 games at first base for the Detroit Tigers in 1914, starting in none of them. He made 26 putouts, had one assist, and committed no errors, equivalent to 0 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in). He had no double plays.
George Stovall played in just one game at third base for the Kansas City Packers in 1914 and did not start. He made no putouts, had no assists, and committed no errors, equivalent to 0 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in). He had no double plays.
George Burns played in 137 games at first base for the Detroit Tigers in 1914, starting in none of them. He made 1579 putouts, had 79 assists, and committed 30 errors, equivalent to .219 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in). He had 72 double plays.
George Cutshaw played in 153 games at second base for the Brooklyn Robins in 1914, starting in none of them. He made 455 putouts, had 444 assists, and committed 38 errors, equivalent to .248 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in). He had 74 double plays.
George Moriarty played in 126 games at third base for the Detroit Tigers in 1914, starting in none of them. He made 125 putouts, had 312 assists, and committed 20 errors, equivalent to .159 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in). He had 16 double plays.
George Perring played in 41 games at first base for the Kansas City Packers in 1914, starting in none of them. He made 386 putouts, had 18 assists, and committed 4 errors, equivalent to .098 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in). He had 26 double plays.
George Stovall played in 116 games at first base for the Kansas City Packers in 1914, starting in none of them. He made 1201 putouts, had 70 assists, and committed 14 errors, equivalent to .121 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in). He had 82 double plays.
George Perring played in 101 games at third base for the Kansas City Packers in 1914, starting in none of them. He made 100 putouts, had 223 assists, and committed 23 errors, equivalent to .228 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in). He had 20 double plays.
This is not any type of "prototype penny." It's one of numerous novelty modifications made to a standard Lincoln cent after it was minted. Because of that, any numismatic value the base coin itself may have had is completely ruined. It has a novelty value of a dollar or less.