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Uh, please look at your pocket change. ALL of the state quarters have double dates on them, one for the year the coin was minted and one for the year that the coin's state was admitted to the Union. That means you have a coin honoring Pennsylvania, Delaware, New Jersey, etc. because they were admitted in 1787.Billions of each of these have been made, so your coin is worth the same amount as all of the other state quarters out there, 25 cents.
This question can only be answered if you provide to me the specific date and mint mark of the coin as well as its mint state. Each coin, minted prior to 1890, carries a different value, based on popularity, year, mint state, and how many were minted each year by the US Mint.
The value of a 1799 coin depends on the coin's denomination such as dime or quarter. It also depends on what country the coin came from, where it was minted and the condition of the coin. Without that information, it is impossible to state a value.
According to "History of the lost state of Franklin", by Samuel Cole Williams some State Of Franklin coins were minted. He also said that no known examples exist. The book was originally publish in 1933.
July 17, 2009 The US Mint did not issue a gold 1969 penny. Copper does tarnish and can appear as a golden hue. A circulated copper 1969 Lincoln Cent has little value above the value of the copper it is made from. In Uncirculated grades, it fairs a little better as shown in the chart below. The mintmark for this coin is located under the date. A letter "D" indicates the coin was minted in Denver. A letter "S" indicates the coin was minted in San Francisco. If there is no letter under the date that indicates the coin was minted in Philadelphia and is shown as 1969-P. Uncirculated Grades..1969-P....1969-D....1969-S MS63...........................$6...........$6...........$7 MS64...........................$12.........$12.........$12 MS65...........................$15.........$17.........$20 There is rare error in the 1969 cent known as the 'double die obverse'. In MS63 its value ranges from $55,000 to $75,000 depending upon the actual condition of the coin.
Which country and what coin?
No the "D" stands for Denver Colorado that's were the coin was struck
The last circulating silver U.S. coin was the 1969 half dollar.
It just means it was minted somwhere other than D(delaware, i believe)
The U.S. has never minted a coin in Delaware. In 1932 Mints were located in Philadelphia (no mint mark), Denver (D) and San Francisco (S).
The "D" on the coin is the mintmark of the Denver Mint, NOT the state of Delaware. Average value of the coin is 5 to 10 cents.
It's called a mint mark, not a state mark. The lack of one indicates that the coin was minted in Philadelphia.
Check that coin again. There were no US silver dollars minted that year.
This coin was minted in 1987 for the Centennial of South Dakota. It is a one ounce .999 pure gold coin. It was minted by the Tri-State Mint of Sioux Falls.
Uh, please look at your pocket change. ALL of the state quarters have double dates on them, one for the year the coin was minted and one for the year that the coin's state was admitted to the Union. That means you have a coin honoring Pennsylvania, Delaware, New Jersey, etc. because they were admitted in 1787.Billions of each of these have been made, so your coin is worth the same amount as all of the other state quarters out there, 25 cents.
There were 2,934,631 minted. This coin was struck only as Proofs and available originally only in Proof sets. Check a site such as www.CoinFacts.com for more mintage figures.
For coins minted in British India (pre-1947), the Bombay minted used a dot. For coins minted in independent India, (post-1947), the Bombay mint uses a small diamond (although proof coins from 1969 to 1995 used a "B").