The coin has no silver in it, is still found in circulation and is very common, spend it.
Half a canadian dollar. Dah. Slapin my knee that was so funny. Ay
There is no such thing as a 1968 Franklin halfdollar. But there is a John F. Kennedy half dollar from 1968.
The coin is a 40% silver Kennedy half dollar most are valued only for the silver, about $6.00
A 1968 Kennedy half dollar is composed of 40% silver and 60% copper. This composition was used in Kennedy half dollars minted between 1965 and 1970 as a result of a silver shortage at the time.
The coin is only 40% silver and has a value of $2.73 only the 1964 Kennedy half dollar was 90% silver.
No US silver dollars were made after 1935, look at the back of the coin for 'Half Dollar'.
No such thing. If you mean a 1968 Washington QUARTER, it's still worth 25 cents. If you mean a '68 KENNEDY half dollar, it's worth around $4 because of its silver content.
Starting in 1968, Canadian dimes, quarters, half dollars, and dollars were all made of nickel, not silver. It's worth one dollar in Canada.
That depends on the country. The United States didn't mint any dollar coins that year.
The US didn't make any 1968 commemorative halves, only standard-issue Kennedy halves.
Still worth 50 cents. Unless its pure silver.
It is made of 40% silver and has a melt value of about $2.50 as of 08/2008