All US pennies minted 1909-1958 are wheat cents. 1953 fits into that time frame.
All pennies from 1944 have the wheat ear reverse.
You probably mean date. Series is used when identify paper money. The date is on the right side on the front.
If the coin shows lots of wear, scratches, and dirt it is circulated. If it is still shiny, with very few scratches it will probably be uncirculated.
A 1958 double die wheat penny will have a distorted or doubled image on the coin's design due to a minting error where the coin was struck twice, slightly misaligned. The most noticeable doubling is usually seen on the date and in the lettering of "LIBERTY" on the coin. It's a valuable and sought-after error coin among collectors.
It's not a 1-cent piece. ALL cents struck from mid-1909 to 1958 have the familiar portrait of Lincoln on the front and the words ONE CENT bordered by wheat ears on the back. It's possible you have a token or "scrip" issued by a municipality to help local businesses. Please post a new question with more details, including any wording on the item, to help get a better ID.
I don't know what a 1053 wheat cent is worth but a 1953 is worth 3 to 5 cents retail in average circulated condition.
3-10 cents on average.
1944s wheat Penny
I don't know what a 1053 wheat cent is worth but a 1953 is worth 3 to 5 cents retail in average circulated condition.
Wheat penny's from the 40's & 50's are very common. Most are worth 3 to 10 cents.
3-10 cents on average.
a wheat penny from 1953 is worth 2 to 3 times its value, right now worth 0.02 cents
1953 is a common date for Lincoln cents -- worth about 2 cents
Most are only 3 cents, if it's uncirculated maybe 50 cents.
Yes. Wheat pennies were made 1909-1958. A wheat penny has wheat on the backside.
Price will vary depending on mint mark and condition. About $0.15
Most are only 3 cents, if it's uncirculated 50 cents.