one cent
The 1943 coin is about $3 at most. The 1951 coin is about $1 at most.
The face value is 1 cent.
Cartridge cases were used for 1 cent coins from 1944 through 1946 only. 1943 1 cent coins were zinc coated steel and have average values of 5 to 25 cents depending on condition.
The value of a 1943 Malay one cent coin will change often. Currently, the coin is valued between 30 cents and one dollar.
A genuine 1943 copper (bronze actually) cent exceeds $100,000.00 in value.
No lead 1 cent coins were ever struck by the US. Zinc coated steel cents were struck in 1943 only.
Sorry no steel 1 cent coins dated 1907, only 1943.
Answer It will be dated 1943, be red or brown in color, and weigh 3.11 gm as opposed to 2.7 gm for a steel cent. Steel 1943 cents were often copper plated to appear as if they were the rare variety, but these will stick to a magnet while a genuine 1943 copper cent will not. There are also a lot of counterfeits made by altering the date on a normal 1945 or 1948 cent. Careful comparison with the date on a 1943 steel cent will usually expose these fakes.
The U.S. Mint does not use P mintmarks on one cent coins. A 1943 Lincoln cent without a mintmark was struck at the Philadelphia Mint.
No. Remember that copper is NOT magnetic. You have a common 1943 steel cent that was copper-plated to make it look like one of the famous and rare 1943 bronze cents that were struck by accident. The fact that it's has been plated means it's an altered coin worth only 1 cent.
Yes