Because it costs more than a penny to produce a penny.
In most some cases, no. They are worth their face value of one cent unless they were minted from a rare lot. 1943 wheat pennies are somewhat rare because they are made of steel as an emergency wartime measure, to save the copper for radio wires. Some other wheat pennies have value if they are in good condition. An honest coin collector can tell you, but even if yours are not valuable you can still hold onto them for luck. There are some people who want to stop making pennies altogether, in which case their value will probably increase someday.CorrectionsIt's not that simple. Some wheat cents from the 1920s and earlier can be worth considerable amounts of money depending on their date, mint mark, and condition while others can be quite inexpensive. For example, retail prices for a worn 1924 cent without a mint mark might be 10 to 15 cents, the same date with a D (Denver) mint mark could sell for $20! Also, copper was removed from cents in 1943 because it was needed for bullets and shell casings, not radio wires.And finally, wheat cents were "regular" cents for fifty years because that was the only design minted from mid-1909 till the end of 1958.
In order to want to be a professional hairdresser, you will need to love working with hair. You also will need to love interacting with customers and making small talk!
because they just want the money
A "D" under the date means a Lincoln cent was struck in Denver. No letter means it was struck in Philadelphia(*). Older cents (1909-55 and 1968-73 may have an S, indicating they were made in San Francisco. The US never used "E" as a mint mark. Please check again with a small magnifying glass. (*) Even though all other coins made in Philadelphia since 1980 carry a "P" mint mark, the Mint decided that cents from Philly would continue to be struck without mint marks. The reason at the time was that demand for cents was so high (>14 billion a year) that the 2 major mints sometimes couldn't keep up with demand. The smaller mints in San Francisco and/or West Point would occasionally be called on to strike extra cents. However these "helper" runs produced comparatively fewer coins and the Mint didn't want to create instant rarities.
Because of the blockade the Union troops forced on the Southern ports. They did not want to risk the goods they were shipping to be destoryed.
Why would you want to make pennies any biger? They're not worth any more by making them bigger, they're still only a penny
1000 pennies = 1000 pennies. Or what do you want to convert it to?
The question is ambiguous.Is 23 pounds the value of the pennies and you want the weightoris 23 pounds the weight of the pennies and you want the value?The question is ambiguous.Is 23 pounds the value of the pennies and you want the weightoris 23 pounds the weight of the pennies and you want the value?The question is ambiguous.Is 23 pounds the value of the pennies and you want the weightoris 23 pounds the weight of the pennies and you want the value?The question is ambiguous.Is 23 pounds the value of the pennies and you want the weightoris 23 pounds the weight of the pennies and you want the value?
Jk Rowling stoped making books
The "S" and the "D" are called mint marks which identify which US Mint produced the coin. Coins with no mint mark prior to 1980 were minted at Philadelphia. Just having an "S" or a "D" mint mark does not mean the coin is worth more. The value of a coin is generally determined by the demand collectors and investors have for the coin. The more people who want to own it, the more it is worth.
I can't find it anywhere did Kraft stop making it? I want to start making it my self.
Racket
The number one reason why is because they want to have your body they are jealous. to stop it tell them you feel uncomfortable and if they don't stop you don't want to be friends.
There are 100 pennies in a dollar, so to convert pennies to dollars, you divide the number of pennies by 100. In this case, 1073741824 pennies divided by 100 equals 10737418.24 dollars. Therefore, 1073741824 pennies is equivalent to 10737418.24 dollars.
$10,000why you would want 10K in pennies though is another matter....50 pennies to a roll...that's 20,000 rolls...
In most some cases, no. They are worth their face value of one cent unless they were minted from a rare lot. 1943 wheat pennies are somewhat rare because they are made of steel as an emergency wartime measure, to save the copper for radio wires. Some other wheat pennies have value if they are in good condition. An honest coin collector can tell you, but even if yours are not valuable you can still hold onto them for luck. There are some people who want to stop making pennies altogether, in which case their value will probably increase someday.CorrectionsIt's not that simple. Some wheat cents from the 1920s and earlier can be worth considerable amounts of money depending on their date, mint mark, and condition while others can be quite inexpensive. For example, retail prices for a worn 1924 cent without a mint mark might be 10 to 15 cents, the same date with a D (Denver) mint mark could sell for $20! Also, copper was removed from cents in 1943 because it was needed for bullets and shell casings, not radio wires.And finally, wheat cents were "regular" cents for fifty years because that was the only design minted from mid-1909 till the end of 1958.
Please check your pocket change. Roughly half of all cents in circulation don't have mint marks. The cent is the only denomination that didn't get a P mint mark starting in 1980 because the Philadelphia Mint is sometimes helped by West Point and/or San Francisco. The Mint didn't want to create instant rarities by minting small numbers of W or S cents, so the only circulating cents that now carry a mint mark are from Denver.All Pennies with no marks are from Pennsylvania.