Very little. What you are calling a "misspelling" is actually due to a die break that added a blob to the middle of the word LIBERTY. There were many similar die-break errors on cents in the mid 1950s, and they only command a few cents' premium.
About 3 cents.
This coin is common and is worth about 2 to 5 cents in circulated condition.
Please see the link below for values
It's worth about 3 cents. Post-WWII wheat cents are extremely common and not very valuable.
1954-D is a common date for pennies. In uncirculated condition, each one might be worth 10 cents, or $5 for the roll.
Liberty Shoes was created in 1954.
This is a very very common coin. They are worth only 4-9 cents in circulated grades. A nice uncirculated one might bring around 50 cents.
Yes.
This is not a mint error. The coin has been altered some how, likely two halves glued together..It has no numismatic value.
6-25-11>>> Common date circulated coins from the 1950s are still only 5 to 15 cents.
Liberty Hyde Bailey died on 1954-12-25.
If the coin is a Brilliant Uncirculated example, maybe 50 cents or more but if it's not 2 to 3 cents. This is a very common date for Lincoln cents.