There are no spectacularly rare cents from the 1960s because huge numbers were minted every year.
The only date that's even slightly valuable is a 1960 small-date cent, which has a small circular zero in the date rather than a larger oval digit. But even so, these sell for less than a dollar in circulated condition.
If you mean a penny from 1960 the answer would be one penny. These coins are not rare and can easily be found be searching through pocket change. If you mean pennies from the 1960s the answer would still be the same. Again these can easily be found in pocket change.
A rare date for wheat pennies would be 1909 S VDB.
No, the 1951 Lincoln cent is not rare.
Not really.
They were minted at the Philidelphi(no mint-mark), Denver(D) mints. These pennies are not rare.
1943 silver pennies
If you mean a penny from 1960 the answer would be one penny. These coins are not rare and can easily be found be searching through pocket change. If you mean pennies from the 1960s the answer would still be the same. Again these can easily be found in pocket change.
A rare date for wheat pennies would be 1909 S VDB.
No, the 1951 Lincoln cent is not rare.
Not really.
They were minted at the Philidelphi(no mint-mark), Denver(D) mints. These pennies are not rare.
A rare date would be 1909-S VDB.
Uh, the word "everyday" means "ordinary or commonplace" so something that's commonplace can't be rare. If you're asking what are rare dates for Lincoln pennies please see the Related Question for more details.
NO, cleaning them will probably reduce their value
Please see Related Answers
There are 100 pennies in a dollar, so to convert dollars to pennies just simply multiply by 100.$185,000 = 18,500,000 pennies.Dan MooreThe Working Man's Rare Coinshttp://www.workingmancoins.com
Yes, in 1943, some pennies were made of steel due to a shortage of copper during World War II. These steel pennies are rare and highly sought after by collectors.