$7 to $8; maybe slightly more (depending on just how "well worn" it is) if it has a "D" (for "Denver") mintmark. At 0.3617 troy ounces of silver, the "melt value" (based on the price of $15.82 per troy ounce on January 8, 2008) is $5.72.
ALL coins in the U.S. have the word LIBERTY on them, and in 1795 ALL coins had a picture of Miss Liberty on the obverse side as well. Please post a new question indicating the coin's denomination.
50¢. It's an ordinary circulation coin, and it's called a Kennedy half dollar. ALL U.S. coins bear the word "Liberty" and many older ones have a picture of Miss Liberty as well.
Well the answer is that its worth 410$ dollars i would know i have the exact coin
Regardless of mint mark, $6 if well-worn, up to $10 or so if almost uncirculated.
Well, first off you don't have a 1918 W Mercury dime, the West Point Mint wouldn't be established for several more years and never produced any coins with a W mintmark for circulation. The W is the designer's initials, any mintmark will be on the reverse. None of the 1918 coins are rare so they are worth the price of silver, assuming they are in circulated condition, which is about $2.11 at the time of writing, if uncirculated it could be worth quite a bit more.
Well its about 100-200$ if it is in good condition.
If well worn, about $20 retail. THE VALUE OF A 1943 LAEGE CENT
ALL coins in the U.S. have the word LIBERTY on them, and in 1795 ALL coins had a picture of Miss Liberty on the obverse side as well. Please post a new question indicating the coin's denomination.
50¢. It's an ordinary circulation coin, and it's called a Kennedy half dollar. ALL U.S. coins bear the word "Liberty" and many older ones have a picture of Miss Liberty as well.
50¢. It's an ordinary circulation coin, and it's called a Kennedy half dollar. ALL U.S. coins bear the word "Liberty" and many older ones have a picture of Miss Liberty as well.
Well the answer is that its worth 410$ dollars i would know i have the exact coin
Please post a new and more specific question. ALL U.S. coins have the word Liberty on them and many older ones have a picture of Miss Liberty as well, so saying "Liberty coin" is a bit like asking what kind of car has tires and a windshield, LOL!
$1. It's not gold and not a Liberty dollar. These coins are made of brass and the image on the front is the Native American guide Sacajawea, not Miss Liberty. Well over a billion were struck so they're definitely not rare.
Regardless of mint mark, $6 if well-worn, up to $10 or so if almost uncirculated.
Well, first off you don't have a 1918 W Mercury dime, the West Point Mint wouldn't be established for several more years and never produced any coins with a W mintmark for circulation. The W is the designer's initials, any mintmark will be on the reverse. None of the 1918 coins are rare so they are worth the price of silver, assuming they are in circulated condition, which is about $2.11 at the time of writing, if uncirculated it could be worth quite a bit more.
1910 is considered a common date for Liberty nickels. well-worn = $1 lightly worn = $20 uncirculated = $45
It depends on the year, mintmark and condition of the coin. There is no set "Liberty" dollar coins since all dollar coins prior to the introduction of the Eisenhower dollar in 1971 show a personification of Liberty. Their value depends greatly on the specifics of the coin and range anywhere from $1 (circulated common Eisenhower dollar) to $1 million+ (well-preserved flowing hair dollars, 1804 dollars)