100
There is no time frame that has to be passes after a divorce to get married in Barbados. You just have to show proof that the previous marriage is completed and done.
if its national collectors about 300 to 400$
You may have an uncirculated coin, but not a proof. Proof sets were discontinued in 1942 due to WWII. Proof coinage wasn't resumed until 1950.Please see the Related Question for more information.
Yes. Proof sets contain official US coinage that can be used as legal tender, although to a collector proof sets are worth more in the mint holders in which they are issued. Proof coins are not intended to be spent, but are legal US tender.
No. Coinage of proof sets was suspended during WWII and didn't resume until 1950.
There is no record of the Royal Mint having produced a "gold" Proof set in 1974, only the usual Proof set. Royal Mint gold Proof sets issued from 1980 contain only the "Sovereign" coinage.
There are no British general circulation decimal coins that could be considered to have any collector value unless they are "Mint Uncirculated", "Proof", or part of a "Mint" or "Proof" coin set.
If all coins have birds on reverse, it is a BVI proof set. Average retail value is $12.50.
The San Francisco Mint was placed on hold in 1955 and did not resume production until 1968 when it began the production of proof coinage and only produced supplemental coinage from 1968 until 1974. Since then it only produces proof coinage except for the Susan B. Anthony dollar with 'S' mintmark from 1979 until 1981 a portion of the 1980's pennies were produced there but bear no mintmark. No circulating 'State' quarters are produced in San Francisco.
That is far too broad a question to be answered here. The Isle of Man section of the World Coins catalogue devotes about 60 pages to Isle of Man coins, the majority of which are Proof.
Proof coins were struck to check the quality of the dies used for stamping the coins. They were "experimental" and often were not put into circulation. More recently, though, central banks (or mints) have discovered that there is a lucrative market from collectors and so many sets of proof coins are produced, not for circulation but simply for numismatists.
The January 2010 edition of CoinAge magazine values the 1958 US proof set at $52.00. That same magazine, however, has four advertisments offering to sell such a proof set (each with different Tax and Shipping & Handling charges) at $42.00, $49.00, $51.50 and $52.25.