2 cents, due to copper content.
Assuming you mean Wheat penny's, the 1909-S V.D.B., 1914-D & 1931-S are the icons of the series.
It's worth about 3 cents. It's old, but not rare or valuable.
The only "silver" penny was minted in 1943 to support the war effort. Yours is probably zinc plated.
The 1914 D Penny is a rare and valuable coin. It was minted in Denver and the "D" mintmark is located below the date on the coin. In good condition, it can be worth thousands of dollars to collectors.
one cent i think!
2 cents, due to copper content.
Assuming you mean Wheat penny's, the 1909-S V.D.B., 1914-D & 1931-S are the icons of the series.
It's worth about 3 cents. It's old, but not rare or valuable.
The only "silver" penny was minted in 1943 to support the war effort. Yours is probably zinc plated.
The 1914 D Penny is a rare and valuable coin. It was minted in Denver and the "D" mintmark is located below the date on the coin. In good condition, it can be worth thousands of dollars to collectors.
it is the US currency and is signed by the Treasurer and Secretary of Treasury in Washington D. C.
Not that valuable. Probably 10 to 20 cents, depending on its condition, except for the extremely rare 1944 D/S (where an S was stamped over the D), which could be worth $70 to $150.
The D on a penny indicates it was made at the Denver, Colorado mint
Lincoln head 1927 D penny
In 1922 the only Lincoln cent struck was a 1922-D, worn dies and over polishings caused the D not to strike up well or be completely missing from the coin and are highly valued
The most valuable "Wheat Penny" is an error coin not a regular issue coin. The only known example of a 1943-D Lincoln cent that was struck on a bronze planchet by mistake instead of steel, sold in 2010 for a little more than 1.7 MILLION dollars. For regular issue coins the 1909-S VDB is still the King.