Certainly priceless since there was no Denver until 1858 and no US Mint in Denver until 1879. It had to be left by a space traveler from another dimension. (Or perhaps it was recently struck as a novelty item and has no value.)
To set the value of the dollar
Please rephrase question.
It's not a coin it's a mint medal. Its out of a souvenir set from the Denver mint. The sets are only sold at the gift shoppes at the Denver & Philadelphia mints.
Look at the coin again. The first coin struck at the Denver Mint was in 1906 What you have is a Mint medallion that was included in coin sets for many years. They were struck on cent blanks. The date is the year that the Treasury Department was established.
It's not a penny. Remember, there was no Colorado no Denver and no such mint in that year. Denver was founded in 1858. What you have is a mint token struck on a penny-sized blank. These are included in the uncirculated coin sets issued each year, one for Denver and one for Philadelphia. 1789 is the year that the Treasury Department was established, not the date the token was made. Sometimes people break up the sets and the tokens slip into circulation because they look like pennies. However, they aren't collectible because they don't have a mintage year on them and they all look alike.
It's not a coin. It's a token piece that's struck on a cent blank and included with mint sets. There's one with a D for Denver and another with P for Philadelphia. The year 1789 refers to the date that the Department of the Treasury was established. These pieces do not have the year of mintage on them they are not particularly collectible. They're worth at most 1 cent.
It's not a coin and it's not from 1789. This is a token piece that's struck on a cent blank and included each year with mint sets. There's one with a D for Denver and another with P for Philadelphia. The year 1789 refers to the date that the Department of the Treasury was established. These pieces do not have the year of mintage on them they are not particularly collectible. They're worth at most 1 cent.
It's not a penny. Remember, there was no Colorado no Denver and no such mint in that year. Denver was founded in 1858. What you have is a mint token struck on a penny-sized blank. These are included in the uncirculated coin sets issued each year, one for Denver and one for Philadelphia. 1789 is the year that the Treasury Department was established, not the date the token was made. Sometimes people break up the sets and the tokens slip into circulation because they look like pennies. However, they aren't collectible because they don't have a mintage year on them and they all look alike.
Virtually nothing since the real estate value would be prohibitive for agricultural purposes.
I think that you are referring to the token packaged with uncirculated mint sets from the Denver mint. It has little or no value.
find me on Facebook. Mateson Gutierrez. I have one and might be interested in yours.
The value of an uncirculated penny from the Denver Mint can vary depending on its year of minting and rarity. Generally, modern uncirculated pennies are worth their face value of one cent, while older or rare coins can be worth several dollars or more to collectors. For specific evaluations, it's best to consult a coin catalog or a professional coin dealer.