1911 is the highest mintage year for Liberty Head nickels. Circulated coins run from $3.00 to $40.00 depending on condition but most are low grade and sell for $3.00-$5.00.
The 1911 LIBERTY HEAD nickel is common, values for average circulated coins are $1.00-$3.00.
The V is the Roman numeral for 5, signifying that a nickel is worth 5 cents.
1911 is the highest mintage year for Liberty Head nickels. Circulated coins run from $3.00 to $40.00 depending on condition but most are low grade and sell for $3.00-$5.00
It's the Roman Numeral 5
Most likely this "doubling" is caused by erosion of the die, which happened often from striking these harder metal coins. Value a couple dollars.
The 1911 LIBERTY HEAD nickel is common, values for average circulated coins are $1.00-$3.00.
The V is the Roman numeral for 5, signifying that a nickel is worth 5 cents.
1911 is the highest mintage year for Liberty Head nickels. Circulated coins run from $3.00 to $40.00 depending on condition but most are low grade and sell for $3.00-$5.00
It's the Roman Numeral 5
Most likely this "doubling" is caused by erosion of the die, which happened often from striking these harder metal coins. Value a couple dollars.
5.00
Remember Roman numerals? V stands for 5 (as in 5 cents), not victory. What you have is called a Liberty nickel or sometimes a V nickel. There's more information at the question "What is the value of a 1912 US nickel?"
15x its face value if you can read the date
My strong guess is that your "dime" is actually the same size and thickness as a nickel, because .................. it IS a nickel. The "V" is of course the Roman numeral meaning 5.In addition, it's not made of silver, but an alloy of copper and nickel, AND it could not have the so-called Mercury design because that wasn't introduced until 1916.What you have is called a Liberty nickel. 1911 is a fairly common year: In worn condition it retails for about $3. With moderate wear, about $10, and with almost no wear, $30.
About $9.
A) The buffalo nickel design was not introduced until 1913B) The buffalo design does not show the head of a buffalo, it shows the entire animal.If you are referring to a 1911 Liberty nickel, its retail value is $3 to $20 depending on condition.If you are referring to a Buffalo nickel (also called an Indian head nickel) you can find a range of values at this site, among others:
100-700