At any coin shop. Beware though, you aren't going to get much for it, especially if your coin is worn. It isn't a rare coin.
Look at the coin again, no Liberty Head nickel had a mintmark until 1912.
6-18-11>>> The coin is a common date Liberty Head nickel, coins in average circulated condition have values of $1.00-$3.00.
Average circulated 1904 Liberty Head nickels run from $3.00 to $5.00 depending on condition.
My strong guess is that your "dime" is actually the same size and thickness as a nickel, because .................. it IS a nickel. The "V" is of course the Roman numeral meaning 5. Please see the Related Question for details
On face value five cents but to a collecter, if it is in good condition, it would sell for about 3 bucks in bad condition, about 1 dollar, and in ms60 or more (which is almost perfect) and uncirculated it would sell for about 400 dollars. I know that there is a huge gap in the values but that is how old currency value goes.
The Way to Sell Corsets - 1904 was released on: USA: February 1904
1906 is a common date for Liberty Head nickels, most circulated coins are valued at $1.00-$3.00
The "War Nickels" struck from late 1942 to 1945 are 35% silver. These are the only nickels to have any silver. A 1904 Liberty Head nickel is copper-nickel. It's a common coin, most are valued at $1.00-$3.00.
Nickel
Yes - remember "V" means 5 in Roman numerals. The famous "Liberty Nickel" carried a V on the back.
A woman, not "a women"A nickel, not a penny.Assuming 1904 is correct, please check the Related Question.
The V is the Roman numeral for 5, signifying that a nickel is worth 5 cents.