First authorized by the Coinage Act of 1792 on April 2, 1792,[
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the coin was produced in the United States from 1793 to 1857.The US Half cent and the US Large cent were both first minted in 1793 and were the first coins issued by the US Mint.
No mint mark indicates that it was minted in Philadelphia. The coin is worth exactly one cent.
The U.S. Mint has never issued a 4 cent coin.
The US mint did not use mint marks on the 1965 half dollar coin.
Kennedy is on the US half dollar (50 cent) coin and Lincoln is on the penny (1 cent) coin.
...Of what US coin? There have been several US coins intended for circulation ranging from half a cent to $20.
Such a coin does not exist. A "dime" is the slang term for a US 10 cent coin. The Royal Mint has never produced "dimes" or 10 cent coins.
No they did not, only from 1864 to 1873. But there is a $2.50 gold coin dated 1894.
The US Mint did not produce platinmum half dollars in 1971. Please examine your coin to determine its national origin and then post a new question giving more detail about this coin.
Half Cents were produced by the US Mint from 1793 through 1857.
No US Mint has ever struck a 25 cent gold coin.
If the coin is a Lincoln cent dated 1964 it may look like gold or have been gold plated but the US Mint has never made a gold one cent coin.