One cent.
It's from a set of coins sold by a private company that took ordinary pennies and stamped them with little pictures symbolic of each state. They were sold as so-called "collectibles" but don't really have any value on the secondary market. Coin collectors consider them to be damaged goods.
This is a novelty coin not made by the US mint and has no collectible value.
There's no such thing.
A 1978 new penny from the United Kingdom is worth its face value of 1 penny. These coins are still in circulation and are common, so they do not have any significant numismatic value.
They cost about $8.95 at novelty shops. Look at it with an 8X magnifier and you should be able to find the seam where one coin was hollowed out and another ground down to fit inside.
The US has never made and never will make silver pennies. If a penny was silver it would be worth more than a dime.
A 1978 Lincoln-Kennedy penny is not considered rare or valuable to collectors and is typically worth face value. A 1946 wheat penny in circulated condition is worth around 10-20 cents, while one in uncirculated condition could be worth a few dollars.
The die was filled with grease or crud and caused the "D" mintmark to fail to strike up. This is a common error and adds no value.
Brad Penny was born on May 24, 1978.
Penny Tai was born on 1978-04-22.
A US penny is .950 coppre .050 zinc
Brad Penny was born on May 24, 1978.
A 1978 Canadian penny with maple leaves is worth one cent in Canada, maybe two if copper prices go back up. All Canadian cents minted 1936-2012 (except for 1967) have maple leaves on the back.