F, not E
The letter F is the monogram of the coin's designer James Fraser.
The U.S. has never used an E mint mark. What you may be seeing is a small F, which is the initial of the designer James Fraser.Mint marks on Buffalo nickels are below the word "Five Cents".blank = PhiladelphiaD = DenverS = San FranciscoPlease see the question "What is the value of a 1928 US nickel?" for more information.
What you're seeing isn't an E and isn't a mint mark. It's a small F, which is the initial of the designer James Fraser.Mint marks on Buffalo nickels are below the word "Five Cents" on the back of the coin.blank = PhiladelphiaD = DenverS = San FranciscoThere's more information at the question "What is the value of a 1928 US nickel?"
"E" is not a mint mark. You're seeing a worn "F", which is the initial of the coin's designer James E. Fraser. The mint mark (if there is one) would be on the back under the words FIVE CENTS.
The letter you see is not a "E" it's an "F" the initial of James Earle Fraser the designer of the coin, and all Buffalo Nickels have it. If the coin has a mintmark, it's on the reverse under FIVE CENTS. 1928 is a common date, coins in average circulated condition have retail values of $1.00 to $5.00
A 2010 U.S. nickel is worth exactly five cents.
The letter you see is an "E". James Earle Fraser the designer of the coin. And all Buffalo Nickels have it. 1935 is a very common date, coins in circulated condition have retail values of 25 cents to $3.00.
The letter is an F rather than E but it's not a mint mark. It's the initial of the coin's designer, James E. Fraser. Mint marks were on the backs of nickels until 1964. The mint mark, if any, is under the words FIVE CENTS. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1935 US nickel?" for more information.
20,000-100,000
The first U.S. nickel was made in 1866. Buffalo nickels were made from 1913 to 1938. Please look at the coin again and post new question.
It is worth 5 cents.
To clear things up: > Not an "E" mintmark. What you're seeing is a small F, which is the initial of the designer James Fraser. Mint marks on Buffalo nickels are below the words FIVE CENTS on the back. > Either "Indian head" or "buffalo", but not "buffalo head". Buffalo nickels show the whole animal! Please see the question "What is the value of a 1927 US nickel?" for more information
They did not exist in 1828! if you mean 1928? then 0.25-3.00$
There is no 1936 E Buffalo Head Nickel. You've probably mistaken an "S" for an E. The D and S are mints marks, telling you which mint the coin was made, coins with no mint mark (or a P) were made at the Philadelphia Mint. In general this coin will be worth $1.00, higher if in better condition.
The "F" under the date of the buffalo nickel isn't a mintmark, it's the initial of the coin's designer, James E. Fraser. The mintmark position is on the back under the words FIVE CENTS. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1927 US nickel?" for more information.
What you're seeing isn't an E and isn't a mint mark. It's a small F, which is the initial of the designer James Fraser.Mint marks on Buffalo nickels are below the word "Five Cents" on the back of the coin.blank = PhiladelphiaD = DenverS = San FranciscoThere's more information at the question "What is the value of a 1923 US nickel?"
The U.S. has never used an E mint mark. What you may be seeing is a small F, which is the initial of the designer James Fraser.Mint marks on Buffalo nickels are below the word "Five Cents".blank = PhiladelphiaD = DenverS = San FranciscoPlease see the question "What is the value of a 1928 US nickel?" for more information.
What you're seeing isn't an E and isn't a mint mark. It's a small F, which is the initial of the designer James Fraser.Mint marks on Buffalo nickels are below the word "Five Cents" on the back of the coin.blank = PhiladelphiaD = DenverS = San FranciscoThere's more information at the question "What is the value of a 1928 US nickel?"