The Latin motto E-PLURIBUS-UNUM is on every coin in your pocket. This coin is just a common bicentennial Kennedy half dollar. None made for circulation have any silver. Only a proof coin would have more than face value.
If it's really silver, it's only 40% - the rest is copper. It's currently worth about $3.
If it has a reddish edge your coin is not silver, it's cupronickel and is worth . . . 50¢
It's still worth 50 cents.
John F. Kennedy is currently on the obverse of the half dollar.
The dates are on the obverse (front) of the coins.
Benjamin Franklin is on the front, and Independence Hall in Philadelphia is on the reverse.DanUser:WorkingMan
It's either not Kennedy, not a silver dollar, and/or not 1935. JFK was still in high school in 1935. His portrait was put on the US half dollar in 1964, following his death.If your coin says ONE DOLLAR and PEACE on the back, the person on the front is MISS LIBERTY. Please see the Related Question for more.
Ben Franklin is on the front of the one-hundered dollar bill and Independence hall is on the reverse side.
A 180 degree rotation between front and back is normal for US coins.
Independence Front Lombardy ended in 2008.
Independence Front Lombardy was created in 2006.
The U.S. Mint did not produce Kennedy half dollars in 1958. Kennedy half dollars were first minted in 1964 following President John F. Kennedy's assassination. If you have a 1958 dollar coin that features the likeness of Kennedy, it may be a commemorative or novelty piece, but it does not hold any significant value as a silver dollar.
The picture on the front of the 50 cent piece is the face of John F. Kennedy (former U.S. President).
The back side of the $100 bill pictures Independence Hall in Philadelphia. (Benjamin Franklin is shown in the front.)
Kennedy halves from 1968 to date have obverse (front) mintmarks. The "P" mintmark was not used until 1980. If no mintmark it was struck in Philadelphia.