On the obverse (heads) side is an image of President Thomas Jefferson, and the reverse (tails) shows his home Monticello.
A dime is smaller than a nickel. A nickel is worth less than a dime. A dime has a ridged side, while a nickel is smooth and thicker.
It depends whether you're putting them side by side or stacking them. Side by side won't work very well because US nickels are 21.2 mm in diameter but an inch is 25.4 mm. If you stack them, the answer is almost exactly 13. Each nickel is 1.95 mm thick so there would be 25.4 / 1.95 = 13.03 coins in an inch. No one will miss that 0.03 of a nickel if the answer is rounded.
Monticello, Thomas Jefferson's plantation home.
A nickel's value is not voided due to worn surface. It should still be worth 5 cents.
Totally rare, i.e. it can't exist. Every nickel must have two sides, whether or not either side has anything printed on it.
The right side
Since 1938, Thomas Jefferson, the third president of the United States has been on the obverse side of the Nickel.
the head on the headside of the nickel is thomas Jefferson
A dime is smaller than a nickel. A nickel is worth less than a dime. A dime has a ridged side, while a nickel is smooth and thicker.
a nickel
East Side West Side - 1963 The Passion of the Nickel Player 1-21 was released on: USA: 9 March 1964
It depends whether you're putting them side by side or stacking them. Side by side won't work very well because US nickels are 21.2 mm in diameter but an inch is 25.4 mm. If you stack them, the answer is almost exactly 13. Each nickel is 1.95 mm thick so there would be 25.4 / 1.95 = 13.03 coins in an inch. No one will miss that 0.03 of a nickel if the answer is rounded.
The presence of the word Monticello under the building indicates it's an image of Thomas Jefferson's home on the other side of a nickel.
Thomas Jefferson, 1938 to date.
It's a 1902 Liberty Head Nickel with a value of $3.00-$5.00 in average condition
A 1999 nickel is a five-cent coin minted by the United States Mint in 1999. It features Thomas Jefferson on the obverse side and Monticello on the reverse side. It is composed of 75% copper and 25% nickel.
Monticello, Thomas Jefferson's plantation home.