I don't believe there were any coins intended for circulation produced for the US centennial, however, there were coins produced for the US bicentennial in 1976, with a design featuring a drummer on the quarter, Independence Hall on the half-dollar and the liberty bell on the dollar coin. All are common and unless in special mint sets, they are worth face value.
The US Centennial was in 1876 but no special coins were issued for it.
I think you're referring to the word "centennial", but regardless, the centennial of the US was back in 1876 which was 41 years before JFK was born. These coins carry the dual date 1776-1976 so they're bicentennial coins.
There were no special coins issued for the US Centennial in 1876.If you have a modern bicentennial quarter with 2 dates, 1776-1976, it's only worth face value in circulated condition.
The coin is face value, only collectors coins sold from the mint have higher values.
None of the bicentennial coins made for general circulation are worth more than face value. Only Proof and collectors coins sold from the US Mint are worth more.
The US Centennial was in 1876 but no special coins were issued for it.
As of 01/2010, these coins sell for about $15.00
I think you're referring to the word "centennial", but regardless, the centennial of the US was back in 1876 which was 41 years before JFK was born. These coins carry the dual date 1776-1976 so they're bicentennial coins.
There were no special coins issued for the US Centennial in 1876.If you have a modern bicentennial quarter with 2 dates, 1776-1976, it's only worth face value in circulated condition.
Please post a new question with more details, including the coin's date and the country that issued it. "Centennial half dollar" could refer to any number of US commemorative coins, several Canadian coins, or could even be a misinterpretation of bicentennial.
The coin is face value, only collectors coins sold from the mint have higher values.
Since the Declaration of Independence was created in 1776, the US Centennial was celebrated in 1876. The Centennial Exposition was in Philadelphia.
None of the bicentennial coins made for general circulation are worth more than face value. Only Proof and collectors coins sold from the US Mint are worth more.
There's no such coin. There were no US coins in 1776 and the Mint didn't make any special coins for the 1876 centennial.If you're referring to double-date coins from the BIcentennial (200 years) in 1976, please see the Related Questions.
Hardly anything above their face value.
The US's Centennial celebration in 1876 had 167 buildings. Within these were 30,000 exhibits.
The value of a Hawaiian centennial coin will vary from time to time. Often, these coins can be worth over 100 dollars on auction sites such as eBay.