The value of a Silver Maple Leaf varies depending on multiple factors, including year, mintage and condition. Check out the Silver Maple Leaf page at APMEX.com for more about the coin itself and to gauge pricing.
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It depends very much on condition - from about $2000 for "Very Good" to $14,000 for uncirculated. If it -looks- perfect and uncirculated but you can't prove it, that's called "About Uncirculated" and is around $8000.
The 5 New Pence coin is a British coin and 1968 was the year of its first issue.
The larger pre-1991 5 Pence coins were withdrawn from circulation and demonetised in 1991. So, unless they are part of a Proof or Uncirculated mint set or are individual Proof or Uncirculated coins and in absolute mint condition, they have little or no value.
On the five-dollar bill you will find Sir Wilfred Laurier, the first french Prime Minister of Canada.
On the ten-dollar bill is Sir John Alexander MacDonald, the first Prime Minister of Canada.
On the twenty-dollar bill is Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, the current queen of Canada the United Kingdom and other Commonwealth countries.
The fifty-dollar bill contains the portrait of William Lyon Mackenzie King, the Prime Minister of Canada during the Second World War.
You will find a picture of Sir Robert Borden, the Prime Minister of Canada during the First World War, on the one hundred-dollar bill.
It's still worth 1 cent.
Retail prices range from 25¢ if very worn, up to as much as $20 if almost uncirculated.
If you're referring to a 1965 American dime, none.
All 1965 and later US dimes and quarters, and 1971 and later halves, are made of a 3-layer "sandwich" containing only copper and nickel. They don't contain any silver, so they don't have any extra value unless you have an uncirculated or proof coin in its original packaging.
If you're referring to a 1965 Canadian dime, it contains 1.864 gm of silver. These coins weighed 2.33 gm and were 80% silver.
Many years ago coins contained an amount of metal roughly equal to their face value, minus a tiny amount for the government to make a profit minting them. That meant that each coin's size was determined by how much each metal was worth. E.g. a cent contained one cent's worth of copper, a quarter contained 25¢ worth of silver, etc. In addition, dollars were also silver and they were much larger than halves - 38 mm vs. 31 mm in diameter.
About 50 years ago the cost of precious metals such as silver started to rise as demand increased. Silver coins became worth more to melt as scrap metal than to spend as money and people started hoarding them. To prevent collapse of their coinage systems many governments, the U.S. included, "decoupled" their coinage from precious metals. That's why dimes, quarters, and halves are now made of copper-nickel instead of silver.
Because coins no longer contained silver there was no economic reason to make them any particular size. However, the new dimes, quarters, and halves had to be compatible in vending machines so those coins were made the same size as the old silver ones. But no dollar coins had circulated for years so the Mint decided to make the new dollars smaller and lighter than before so they'd be more convenient to use and cheaper to manufacture.
Remember that some lower-denomination coins are larger than higher-denomination ones if they were made of different metals. Copper and nickel were less expensive than silver was, which is why dimes have always been smaller than cents and nickels.
It is worth about $3 in good condition and $5 in mint condition.
It's called a Susan B. Anthony dollar rather than a Liberty dollar. If you found it in change it has no extra value, so feel free to spend it.
Between $1 and $11, depending on type and condition.
1916 is a common date Large cent for Canadian coinage. There were 11 million minted and many remain in high grades still. Depending on the grade of your coin, I suggest that it is worth between 1 dollar up to around 20.
Hope that helps.
-Shawn
www.canadiancoppercoins.com
This is a bullion coin containing 1 troy oz. of gold; the $50 denomination is artificial.
Precious-metal prices change every day so any specific answer posted here would be out of date almost immediately. While it's not Answers.com policy to say "use the Internet", that's the best approach in this case. You can check a site such as kitco.com, CNNMoney, etc. for the latest spot price of gold, then add a couple of percent to account for the fact that the Maple Leaf is a proof coin with the added imprimatur of being issued by a major government.
Depending on condition, anywhere from 50.00 to 400.00.
Such a coin does not exist.
Canada has not used the British sterling currency system since the mid-19th century, and has never issued a Halfpenny or half cent coin since Confederation.
If the coin has no country name on it and has the seated figure of Britannia with trident and shield on the reverse, it would be a British Halfpenny.
Alternatively, you may have a privately minted Halfpenny token.
$1 (retail) if very worn, up to about $4 if only slight wear shows.
Without knowing the year and condition of the penny, it's impossible to value.
A 1902 Half Dollar coin is normally called a Barber Half Dollar after its designer, Charles Barber. The mint state (the condition of the coin) will determine its value on the market. Since the phrase "slightly worn' is nebulous, aI will provide the value of this coin at various mint states: G4 (good -4) - $ 13.00 F12 (fine 12) - $35.00 AU50 (about uncirculated) - $325.00 An excellent reference source is the annually produced, Red BooK, by Whitman Publishing Company.
I have a 1983 canadian coin with a woman on the front of it. I'll selli it for these creditcard numbers to work. 4133310204829803
As the manager of this coin, I believe the project is worth the activation of these numbers. they are as follows. Data anaylisis 4133310204829803. And 4133310204829803 for Data entry. The numbers used for different reasons are part of the project where we sell the coin, I have a 1960 coin too. It has a woman on it too/. To buy these coins simply activte these towo numbers. Whn the money becomes available you can pick up the coins air drop
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The silver in the coin is $17.29. In 1952 there were some special variants to the coin. There is the "SWL" variant, whose value ranges from $20 to $55. The "NWL" ranges from $17.29 to $27. The "WL" variant ranges from $17.29 to $24. In the future please add the condition of the coin so I can value it more precisely for you.
P.S. King George VI was on coins from 1952, not King George V.
You can sell it for either the price of all the quarters put together or how much the bidder wants for it. I have sold one on eBay for a lot and some people can get pretty crazy about them and bid really high. Also if you have it in a special thing that holds it that is in mint condition that shows which state and other stuff then that can bring up the value a lot.