That date is still found in circulation today and is face value. With the exception of the war years(1942-1945) all US Nickels from 1866 to date are made from a alloy of .750 copper and .250 nickel.
Yep....... a nickel
Nickel silver is a copper alloy...60% copper, 20% nickel, and 20% zinc. The name comes from its color and appearance. So....it is worth more as scrap metal than as a "precious metal". Sorry!
I have a nickel that is a color of a penny I have a nickel how much is it worth
It's just a nickel, spend it.
Anything minted in the 1970s is made of copper-nickel, not silver, and is only worth face value.
That depends on which version you have. If there is no mintmark, then it's made of copper and nickel, worth maybe 50 cents in decent condition. If there is a large letter P on the back (above Monticello), then it's a silver war nickel, worth a dollar or two.
It's just a nickel, spend it.
A 1939 Jefferson Nickel in rough condition is worth $0.50 and in perfect condition can be up to $5.50.
It is known as a "war nickel" and actually contains no nickel! But it is 35% silver and is worth about $1.25 for the silver content.
A Jefferson half dollar would be a real find, because Jefferson is on the nickel and JFK is on the half dollar. Regardless, a 1979 nickel is worth 5¢ and a 1979 half is worth exactly 10 times as much.
Pennies in 1941 were mostly copper, not nickel, and they're worth about 5 cents.
That's just a regular 2006 nickel. That face is President Jefferson. The coin contains absolutely no silver, and is worth exactly 5 cents.