Gold dimes were not made in 1997 or any other year for that matter. If you have a "gold" dime it's been plated.
Think about it for a minute - gold sells for about $900 an ounce and is far too valuable to be used in such a low denomination coin. A gold coin the size of a dime would be worth about $75. Alternately, 10 cents worth of gold would be so tiny you'd need tweezers and a magnifying glass to pick it up.
None, zero, no dimes were produced in 1922, 1932 or 1933
None, no gold dimes have ever been made by the US Mint.
No. Gold dimes were never produced US the US mint. Even if they would have been you would never spend it because it would be worth way more than a dollar.
There are no gold dimes.
No. US Dimes dated 1965 and later, were all made from a copper-clad alloy. The dime you have is gold-plated.
No, dimes minted in 1920 were made of 90% silver and 10% copper. Gold was not used in the minting of dimes for general circulation.
No. The US Mint produced over one billion Roosevelt Dimes for circulation in 1970.
US dimes were never made of gold.
Current data for the mintage of 2010 business strike dimes is: Philadelphia 557,000,000. Denver 562,000,000.
Ten cents - it's not real gold, it's plated. The US never made gold dimes.
No gold dimes were ever officially made. However individuals or private companies can plate the dimes to look gold and they are simply a novelty. However sometimes they can go for a few dollars due to their slight gold content.
No. U.S. dimes were never made of gold. A gold coin from the same time, and of similar size, was the $2 1/2 gold piece.