A little under $2.
Around $1.50.
Mintage of the 1943-P Jefferson nickel is 271,165,000.
To clear things up, that would be WHITE HOUSE rather than WHITEHOUSE . . . except that as the name under the building shows, it's actually MONTICELLO, Thomas Jefferson's home. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1943 US nickel?" for more information.
That is what is known as a war nickel, because nickel was needed for WWII, it was needed to change the composition of the nickel to one including 35% silver, as of the time of writing, your coin is worth $1.64 in silver content alone.
It is known as a "war nickel" and actually contains no nickel! But it is 35% silver and is worth about $1.25 for the silver content.
Around $1.50.
Mintage of the 1943-P Jefferson nickel is 271,165,000.
To clear things up, that would be WHITE HOUSE rather than WHITEHOUSE . . . except that as the name under the building shows, it's actually MONTICELLO, Thomas Jefferson's home. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1943 US nickel?" for more information.
That is what is known as a war nickel, because nickel was needed for WWII, it was needed to change the composition of the nickel to one including 35% silver, as of the time of writing, your coin is worth $1.64 in silver content alone.
It is known as a "war nickel" and actually contains no nickel! But it is 35% silver and is worth about $1.25 for the silver content.
About $2.
The only difference is it has a P on the back of it (Opposite of the face)
as of today silver prices approx 1.01usd
A 1943 S nickel is worth $1.25 in G-4, $1.50 In F-12, $4.00 in EF-40, $7.00 in MS-60.
Values for a circulated war nickel are $1.00-$2.50 depending on the grade
Circulated examples of this Jefferson over-date run from $25.00 to $200.00. Mint State examples are $225.00 to $350.00
50 dollars