There are a lot of different 2 cent Washington stamps. The most common, and most the likely the type you have is worth maybe 10 cents mint and less than one cent used.
Washington appears on a number of 2 cent stamps. Consult an online catalog for information to figure out which one you have. That will provide you an estimate on the value.
$5.00 on Ebay
George Washington and Benjamin Franklin were the first two individuals. Washington was honored as the first President. Franklin was honored for being the first Postmaster of the United States.
Benjamin Franklin - 5c Brown - Scott #1George Washington - 10c Black - Scott #2
Ben Franklin and George Washington were shown on the first 2 US stamps, both of which came out in 1847. The earliest documented use of the Washington (10-cent) stamp was July 2, 1847 and the earliest documented use of the Franklin ( 5-cent) stamp was July 7, 1847.
These are still very common - worth no more than 2 cents.
Depends on condition take to reputable coin and stamp dealer or look for value on web
There were 1863 2 cent pieces which were minted as pattern coins - test pieces to see what coins look like before a great number are minted and released into general circulation. The 1863 2 cent patten coins feature George Washington - the first time he appeared on a US coin and the interesting motto "GOD OUR TRUST" These pattern 2 cent pieces are quite rare and worth thousands of dollars. See the linked website for more. Also note that the coin is called a 2 cent piece rather than "2 cent penny", because a penny is the slang name for a 1-cent coin.
No such coin. A penny is one cent so a 2 cent penny does not exist. There are US Two- Cent pieces but a date is needed.
Such a coin does not exist. There are 2 cent coins, Shilling coins and Two Shillings coins, but no 2 cent Shillings. The cent and the Shilling do not belong in the same currency.
Firstly, the stamp is NOT from 1732, as that was the year Washington was born. Some people ask the moon for one, but a used specimen is only worth a few dollars.
"Cents" is the plural of "cent". This could be a little confusing, so pay attention. Referring to value, you can have 1 cent, 2 cents, 10 cents, 50 cents, etc. Example - apples are 1 cent each, oranges are 2 cents each. Referring to coins, you can have a 1 cent coin, a 5 cent coin, a 10 cent coin, etc. Example 1 - I have a 1 cent coin, a 2 cent coin and a 10 cent coin in my pocket. Example 2 - I have two 1 cent coins, three 2 cent coins and four 10 cent coins in my pocket. You are referring to the coins and describing them by their values.