Look to the right of the word "ONE" on the reverse. D stands for Denver. The S stands for San Francisco.
With no mint mark and in average condition, about a dime. With a "D", about a quarter. With an "S", around 35¢
1941 Winged Liberty Head/Mercury Dime: With no mint mark, in fine condition is worth $0.70, uncirculated is worth $17.00, proof is worth $175.00. With D mint mark, in fine condition is worth $0.70, uncirculated is worth $17.00. With S mint mark, in fine condition is worth $0.70, uncirculated is worth $20.00.
The mint mark is on the back, or obverse, to the right of the letter E in one. The letter D is for the Denver mint and the letter S is for San Francisco. If your coin is without a mintmark, it was struck at the Philadelphia mint.
No rare 1941-S dimes. The 1941-S Mercury dime does have large and small mintmark varieties as do all coins (except the half dollar) that were struck in San Francisco in 1941, they have no added value.
If you have a so-called "Barber" dime (named for its designer, not a hair cutter) there won't be a D mint mark because that design was struck only at Philadelphia and San Francisco.If you have a Mercury head dime the mint mark position will be to the right of the E in ONE on the back. It may be blank (Phila.), or there may be an S or D.
With no mint mark and in average condition, about a dime. With a "D", about a quarter. With an "S", around 35¢
1941 Winged Liberty Head/Mercury Dime: With no mint mark, in fine condition is worth $0.70, uncirculated is worth $17.00, proof is worth $175.00. With D mint mark, in fine condition is worth $0.70, uncirculated is worth $17.00. With S mint mark, in fine condition is worth $0.70, uncirculated is worth $20.00.
The mint mark is on the back, or obverse, to the right of the letter E in one. The letter D is for the Denver mint and the letter S is for San Francisco. If your coin is without a mintmark, it was struck at the Philadelphia mint.
No rare 1941-S dimes. The 1941-S Mercury dime does have large and small mintmark varieties as do all coins (except the half dollar) that were struck in San Francisco in 1941, they have no added value.
If you have a so-called "Barber" dime (named for its designer, not a hair cutter) there won't be a D mint mark because that design was struck only at Philadelphia and San Francisco.If you have a Mercury head dime the mint mark position will be to the right of the E in ONE on the back. It may be blank (Phila.), or there may be an S or D.
The difference (and the value) is where they were made. S= San Francisco, D= Denver.
The mint mark (if it has one) is on the reverse, along the rim, at about 7 o'clock, just to the right of the "E" in ONE. It's in the same place on all years of Mercury dimes. Possible mint marks are: (none) = Philadelphia D = Denver S = San Francisco
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
From 1946 to 1964, the mint mark position was at the bottom left of the torch on the back of the coin. No mint mark = Phila. S = San Francisco D = Denver
a 1944 dime isn't rare for that year.a d mark is worth about a $1,a p mark is $1 and a s mark is about 2 or 3 dollars. <><><> ANY 90% silver US dime is worth $3.44 for the SILVER content as of this morning. In addition to any collector's value. 4/25/11
Franklin D. Roosevelt is on the US dime.
It's called a mint mark. A "D" on any current U.S. coin means it was struck at the Denver Mint. "P" or no mint mark means Philadelphia, and "S" means San Francisco.