July 17, 2009 The 1934 Buffalo nickel was produced at 2 US Mint facilities; Philadelphia and Denver. The mintmark for these mints can be found on the reverse [tails] side of the coin beneath the words "FIVE CENTS". The letter "D" indicates the coin was minted at Denver mint. If there is no letter that indicates the coin was minted at the Philadelphia mint and is shown a 1934-P in this reply. The values of these coins are shown in the chart below. Circulated Grades.........1934-P.......1934-D G4..................................$4................$4 F12.................................$5................$7 EF40...............................$15..............$26 Uncirculated Grades MS60...............................$48................$80 MS63...............................$62................$110 MS64...............................$115..............$270 MS65...............................$325...............$625
A 1943 penny could be a "steel penny" as they were made of steel due to copper being needed for other wartime purposes. Nickels were made of 35% silver during WWII. If a 1943 penny and nickel were mixed, it would potentially be an error as they wouldn't have been in circulation together due to their different compositions.
The 1943 Lincoln cent is zinc coated steel not nickel and average values are 5 to 10 cents
The 1943 Lincoln cent was made of steel, not the nickel. Do a Google search to find the picture you want.
Mintage of the 1943-P Jefferson nickel is 271,165,000.
A 1943 S nickel is worth $1.25 in G-4, $1.50 In F-12, $4.00 in EF-40, $7.00 in MS-60.
Around $1.50.
A little under $2.
It is known as a "war nickel" and actually contains no nickel! But it is 35% silver and is worth about $1.25 for the silver content.
A 1943-D nickel, also known as a "War Nickel," is worth around 50 cents to $1 in circulated condition. However, if it is in uncirculated condition or has any special characteristics, it could be worth up to $5 or more to a collector.
1913-1938 are the years the us mint minted "buffalo" nickel's.. Only Jefferson nickels were minted in 1943. 1943 nickel is usually called a "War Nickel" (minted during war time w/ silver) Hope I didn't confuse the question...
Values for a circulated war nickel are $1.00-$2.50 depending on the grade
About $2.