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silver content in 1867-1967 Canadian quarter
What about it?
its a hooded clansman with raised eyes made of silver i think, its has the markings kkk, then underneath that is the year 1867
I got 1 today and paid silver price from a dealer. hope that helps
Presumably your coin carries the double date 1867-1967, which means it was minted for the Canadian Centennial. In average condition it has no added value. In EF-40, it retails for only 15 to 20 cents.To explain, the first Canadian coins called nickels were minted in 1922 and none have ever contained silver. Five-cent pieces issued before that year were tiny coins made of 80% silver but none were minted in 1867, so you could not have an 1867 nickel.
Canadian nickels (1922-present) never contained silver. Centennial nickels were made of 99.9% pure nickel metal.
There is about 10 - 20 oz of silver in a 1867-1967 Canadian silver dollar
Two different kinds of 3 cent coin are dated 1867 a small silver coin and a dime sized nickel coin. Please post new question with that information
if you are asking what the value is: here is my answer. it is work anywhere from $15-$50 from what i have seen. it all depends on the condition
That's hardly a whale - it's a salmon. These coins were made of 80% silver so they're worth about 75-80 cents U.S. for their silver content.
In 1867 there were many more denominations of coins than today. Denominations minted that year were:1¢ (minted in bronze)2¢ (minted in bronze)3¢ (minted in both silver and copper-nickel)5¢ (half-dimes, minted in silver)5¢ (minted in copper-nickel)10¢ (dime, silver)25¢ (quarter, silver)50¢ (half, silver)$1.00 (minted as both large silver coins and small gold coins)$2.50 (quarter eagle, gold)$3.00 (gold)$5.00 (half eagle, gold)$10.00 (eagle, gold)$20.00 (double eagle, gold)
Huge numbers of these coins were minted for the Confederation Centennial. Unless it's uncirculated or proof, only about $1 for the silver it contains.