The mintmarks for all Lincoln cents are located under the date. Possible mint marks are:
The mint mark does not determine the value of a coin. If you have a penny and want to know what it is worth, please submit a new question and include the date on your penny as well as the mint mark.
There has never been an A mint mark on US coins. Please check again, or see the related question for information about 1940 cents.
A 1941 penny without a mintmark means it was minted in Philidelphia.
1940S Wheat Penny: very good condition-$ .05, mint condition-$1.50, uncirculated-$5.00 .15-6.00
8 to 20 cents depending on condition.
The 1957 D Wheat Penny was made in Denver Colorado. The "D" is the mint mark for the Denver mint.
The mint mark does not determine the value of a coin. If you have a penny and want to know what it is worth, please submit a new question and include the date on your penny as well as the mint mark.
There is no such mint mark. The only mints to strike cents with mint marks are Denver (D) and San Francisco (S). See this link for values.
Yes. $1.25 if there is no mint mark, $7.75 if it has a D mint mark, and $132.50 if it has a S mint mark.
There has never been an A mint mark on US coins. Please check again, or see the related question for information about 1940 cents.
A 1941 penny without a mintmark means it was minted in Philidelphia.
1940S Wheat Penny: very good condition-$ .05, mint condition-$1.50, uncirculated-$5.00 .15-6.00
8 to 20 cents depending on condition.
Regardless of which mint mark it has, values are 5 to 10 cents. Uncirculated coins are a dollar or less.
According to a 2014 coin price chart, there is no wheat penny that is worth $12,500. There is, however, a 1922 (no mint mark) wheat penny worth about $500 in circulated condition and $20,000 in mint condition. The highest price penny like this is a 1944 Steel penny that is worth $100,000 in mint condition and $4,000 in circulated condition.
Value will vary depending on condition and mint mark. About $0.35
The mint mark on the 1943 Lincoln Wheat Cent, and on all wheat cents, is located on the obverse (heads) side of the coin just below the date. The mark "D" represents the U.S. Mint at Denver, Colorado, the mark "S" represents the U.S. Mint at San Francisco, California, and if there is no mint mark under the date then the coin was minted at the U.S. Mint at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.