The coins are still in circulation and are face value. Only a high grade Mint State coin will have more value, about 25 cents.
A 1959 NICKEL is still worth 5 cents only.
The only US nickels to contain silver are those minted during WWII. A 1959 nickel in uncirculated condition might go for 25 cents.
The coins are still in circulation and are face value. Only a high grade Mint State coin will have more value, about 25 cents.
The coins are still in circulation and are face value, only a high grade Mint State coin will have more value, about 25 cents.
SILVER, not "sliver", and in any case all 1959 nickels are made of an alloy of 75% copper and 25% nickel. From mid-1942 to 1945 nickels did contain a small amount of silver because nickel metal was needed for the war effort. Those "war nickels" are the ONLY ones that have any silver in them.
A 1959 NICKEL is still worth 5 cents only.
It's still worth 5 cents.
No silver in a 1959 nickel.
The only US nickels to contain silver are those minted during WWII. A 1959 nickel in uncirculated condition might go for 25 cents.
The coins are still in circulation and are face value. Only a high grade Mint State coin will have more value, about 25 cents.
The coins are still in circulation and are face value, only a high grade Mint State coin will have more value, about 25 cents.
SILVER, not "sliver", and in any case all 1959 nickels are made of an alloy of 75% copper and 25% nickel. From mid-1942 to 1945 nickels did contain a small amount of silver because nickel metal was needed for the war effort. Those "war nickels" are the ONLY ones that have any silver in them.
It has an uncirculated value of about $1 to $15,000 depending upon the condition of the coin. Circulated values are less than a dollar.
the value of the nickel is 5 cent
Only nickels made during the war years of 1942-1945 contain any silver. All other nickels from 1866 to mid-1942 and 1946 to date are made of 75% copper and 25% nickel - no silver whatsoever. A 1959 nickel, aka - Jefferson 5 cents, is worth in good condition (G4): 25 cents; If its mint state is MS63, its value climbs to: $1.00.
$0.67
Jochen Nickel was born on April 10, 1959, in Witten, Germany.