Despite being packaged as a wartime set, none of those coins are rare or especially valuable. The 1943 is worth 10 cents, and the rest are worth around 3 cents each.
You may have an uncirculated coin, but not a proof. Proof sets were discontinued in 1942 due to WWII. Proof coinage wasn't resumed until 1950.Please see the Related Question for more information.
A were convinced
I'm assuming you are referring to the alternate designs on circulating US coinage during 1976? Unless they are proof or uncirculated, they aren't worth anything over face. Coins were produced in bulk with those designs, finding bicentennial half dollars, quarters and dollars are really easy to do so and can be pulled out of pocket change.
Farmers
Condition is everything when it comes to Barber coinage. In very poor grades it is only really worth melt value, about $2 or so, or depending on collector demand, even as much as $5-25 in circulated grades (the 1894 dime is known as a semi-key date) However, in excellent condition the price increases dramatically, if in about uncirculated condition it can be worth over $200.
Theodore Roosevelt. He was the force behind changing US coinage at the turn of the century.
You need to be more specific, tell us the dates and mintmarks and the denomination of the coins. "Wartime coinage collections" are privately made and contain different dates/mintmarks so it is impossible to value.
Abraham Lincoln, in 1864. The motto first appeared on the 2-cent coin.
There are no British general circulation decimal coins that could be considered to have any collector value unless they are "Mint Uncirculated", "Proof", or part of a "Mint" or "Proof" coin set.
Coinage could be accurately described as neology.The recent coinage of the word redonkulous is suspect.
The Coinage Act of established the United States coinage system. It was also commonly known as the Mint Act.
Michael F. Hendy has written: 'Coinage and money in the Byzantine Empire, 1081-1261' -- subject(s): Byzantine Coins, Numismatics 'Catalogue of the Byzantine Coins in the Dumbarton Oaks Collection and in the Whittemore Collection, 4, Alexius I to Michael VIII, 1081-1261 (Dumbarton Oaks Byzantine Collection Catalogs)'
As of 07/2008, sammler.com, a major German coinage site, lists values as: > average condition - about $35 > moderately worn - $55 > uncirculated - $100
George Washington ($1 bill and quarter), Abraham Lincoln ($5 bill and penny), and Thomas Jefferson ($2 bill and nickel)
The following words rhyme with coinage - forage storage linage package
The answer will depend on which country's coinage the question is about.
Alluminum is probably the lightest of coinage metals used to-date.