It means that it was produced in Denver, Colorado (for coins dated 1906 or later) or Dahlonega, Georgia (for gold coins dated 1838 to 1861).
The letter is known as the mint-mark and tells where the coin was made. A coin having a P mint-mark (or no mint-mark on some coins) was made in Philadelphia, a coin having an S Mint-mark was minted in San Fransisco, a coin with a D mint-mark was minted in Denver.
The "D" is the mint mark, it stands for the Denver Mint
It's called a mint mark and indicates where the coin was minted. The mint mark 'D' stands for Denver.
No - there are three types ... 392,021,000 with no mint mark 57,154,000 with D mint mark 57,154,000 with S mint mark for 1919 USA 1 Cent. The mint mark (if present) is below the date.
US Quarters minted in 1954 bear both the mint mark of San Francisco, California mint "S" and the mint mark of the Denver, Colorado mint "D". Additionally, the US Mint at Philadelphia, Pensylvania also struck these quarters but no mint mark was used.
The D mint mark stands for the Denver Mint in Colorado were the coin was made.
With no D mint mark or no mint mark at all it's from Philadelphia.
The letter is known as the mint-mark and tells where the coin was made. A coin having a P mint-mark (or no mint-mark on some coins) was made in Philadelphia, a coin having an S Mint-mark was minted in San Fransisco, a coin with a D mint-mark was minted in Denver.
The "D" mintmark means that it was produced in Denver, Colorado. The terms Uncirculated and Mint State mean the same. The coin has not been used, shows no sign of wear from being in circulation, as is from the Mint.
The letter D is the mint mark so it can't both have a mint mark and not have a mint mark.Please see the related question for more information.
The "D" is the mint mark, it stands for the Denver Mint
The letter D is the mint mark so it can't both have a mint mark and not have a mint mark.Please see the related question for more information.
The "D" mint mark means the coin was minted in Denver, Colorado USA
I'm assuming you mean the mint-mark? The mint-mark shows which branch of the US mint created the coins, if there is a P mark (or no mintmark on some coins) the coin was minted in Philadelphia, a D mark signifies Denver, an S mark shows the coin was from San Fransisco and a W mark is from the West Point Mint.
In us coinage the d is a mint mark of the Denver Colorado mint.
Yes. $1.25 if there is no mint mark, $7.75 if it has a D mint mark, and $132.50 if it has a S mint mark.
It's a mint mark indicating where the coin was made: > No mint mark = Philadelphia > D = Denver > S = San Francisco