The 1944 Mercury Dimes (aka - Winged Liberty Head) were minted in Phillie, Denver, and San Francisco.
No. The West Point mint was established in the 1980s. This is a common area of confusion. You're seeing the monogram of the designer, A. A. Weinmann. Mercury dimes have their mint mark on the reverse next to the word ONE - blank = Phila., D = Denver, S = San Francisco.
About 1000 trial pieces were minted in 1856. Regular circulation issues were only minted in 1857 and 1858. The familiar Indian Head design followed in 1859.
No Mercury head dimes were struck at the West Point Mint. The "W" on the front of the coin is the designer's initial.
November 21 1944 was a Tuesday.
No, June 6th, 1944
The date.
Miss Liberty. Various portraits of her were used on all dimes minted up till 1945.
No, no proof dimes were made in 1944.
None, Roosevelt dimes replaced the Mercury dimes in1946
Silver dimes were last minted in 1964 in the US.
The first US dimes were minted in 1796.
A 1944 mercury dime is worth $________ if it is in G4 condition- $1.25, F-12 condition $1.50, VF-20 $2.00, EF-40 condition, $4.00, MS-60 condition $10.00. There were 231,410,000, 1944 dimes minted that year.
Yes, all mercury dimes were minted before the mint started making copper/nickel dimes.
US dimes were first minted in Philadephia in 1796.
It appears as though there were 620,684 silver Roosevelt Dimes minted in 2008. All of these silver dimes are proof and available only in the 2008 Silver Proof set.
There is no such coin. The first Mercury dimes were minted in 1916. Please check the date and post a new question. Dimes minted before 1916 are called Barber dimes, after their designer.
1944 is a common date for Mercury dimes and there are no significant varieties.