It's not a mint mark. It's the monogram of A. A. Weinman, who designed both the "Mercury" dime and Walking Liberty half dollar.
The 'W' you see is the designer's monogram not a mintmark. If the coin has a mintmark it's on the reverse.
The mint mark is below the date.
No - there are three types ... 392,021,000 with no mint mark 57,154,000 with D mint mark 57,154,000 with S mint mark for 1919 USA 1 Cent. The mint mark (if present) is below the date.
Directly below the date. If there is no mint mark, then it's from Philadelphia.
No "W" mint mark on a 1923 Dime, it's the designers monogram (A. Weinman) the mint mark is on the reverse to the left of the fasces
The 'W' you see is the designer's monogram not a mintmark. If the coin has a mintmark it's on the reverse.
The mint mark is below the date.
No - there are three types ... 392,021,000 with no mint mark 57,154,000 with D mint mark 57,154,000 with S mint mark for 1919 USA 1 Cent. The mint mark (if present) is below the date.
Directly below the date. If there is no mint mark, then it's from Philadelphia.
No "W" mint mark on a 1923 Dime, it's the designers monogram (A. Weinman) the mint mark is on the reverse to the left of the fasces
"W" isn't a mint mark. The West Point Mint didn't start making coins until the 1980s. It's the initials of the coin's designer - an intertwined A W for A. Weinman. Please see the Related Question for values.
No, only Proof eagles have a W mint mark
The mint mark position on all "Mercury" dimes is next to the E in ONE on the back. No mint mark = Philadelphia S = San Francisco D = Denver
yes
the w isn't a mint mark. it is actually an A and a W intertwined. it is the initials of the artist.
1919 makes it a Standing Liberty quarter, so the mint mark is on the obverse (heads) side, just to the left of Liberty's feet. D is Denver, S is San Francisco, and no mark is Philadelphia.
W is the monogram of the designer, A. A. Weinmann. The mint mark location is on the back side, at the 8:00 position