The silver value of the half is anywhere from 16 - 22 times the face value - - $8 t0 $11 dollars.
The numismatic value of the half depends on the grade.
The collectors value of the set in original card is anywhere from $11 to what you can sell it for! This is the truth.
75 dollars
The U.S. Mint has never made a "Memorial" Kennedy half dollar. Many different society's have counter stamped & gold plated Kennedy half dollars an sold them as "Memorial" coins. The coins are considered altered and have no numismatic value.
Kennedy is on the US half dollar (50 cent) coin and Lincoln is on the penny (1 cent) coin.
The value of the Lincoln Memorial Cents minted from 1959 through 2008 in brilliant uncirculated condition is worth approximately 15.00 for the business minted coins from Philadelphia, Denver, And San Francisco... If you also have all of the proof coins issued from 1968 through 2008 you could probably add another 75.00 to 125.00 more in value to the collection... In 2009 the Lincoln Cents depicted 4 different reverses for the life of Abraham Lincoln...and in 2010 the Lincoln Cents changed their reverse to a Shield...and that will be continued until further notice...
I also have one with letters from liberty across the face. Thanks
It's just a penny, spend it.
The Lincoln Memorial reverse was introduced in 1959. If you have a 1958 cent with the Memorial reverse it should be inspected by an expert. Most likely it's a fake, possibly made by splitting a 1958 cent in half and fusing a Memorial reverse on it.
Wheat cents are a variety of Lincoln cents minted from 1909 to 1958, currently worth about two cents. The Lincoln memorial pennies are still face value.
It would depend on the coins' conditions, but the majority of Lincoln Memorial pennies in that date range retail for less than a nickel each in the lowest uncirculated grade (MS-60). The only outstandingly valuable one is an error coin, the so-called "1983 over 83" with a doubled date.
Lincoln cents with Kennedy's face counter stamped on them are novelty coins that have no numismatic value at all. Many different dates and mintmarks exist, but they are still only face value.
It's still only one cent. This is NOT a mint error.
The Lincoln Memorial reverse was introduced in 1959. If you have a 1958 cent with the Memorial reverse it should be inspected by an expert. Most likely it's a fake, possibly made by splitting a 1958 cent in half and fusing a Memorial reverse on it.