It was made at the Denver Mint.
Cents made at Philadelphia (and very occasionally, West Point) don't have mint marks. These amount to about half of the cents made every year, and are the only Philadelphia coins since 1980 that don't have a P mint mark.
Modern proof cents and older circulating cents also come from San Francisco which uses an S mint mark.
They were minted at the Philidelphi(no mint-mark), Denver(D) mints. These pennies are not rare.
The "D" is the mint mark, it stands for the Denver Mint
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.
Denver, Colorado, the location of the mint at which it was produced.
The mint mark "S" on US coins means the coin was minted in San Francisco, California. For more information concerning mint marks visit the site at the related link, below. Coins produced at the Denver mint have a "D" and those at the Philadelphia mint have either no mint mark (for pennies and coins before 1980) or a "P" for all other denominations. Coins produced at the mint at West Point, NY (largely bullion coins, although some 1996 dimes were produced there) have a "W" mint mark.
They were minted at the Philidelphi(no mint-mark), Denver(D) mints. These pennies are not rare.
The "D" is the mint mark, it stands for the Denver Mint
In us coinage the d is a mint mark of the Denver Colorado mint.
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.
Their are a few answers. For pennies no mint mark means Philadelphia or for proof pennies which are only in proof sets S means San Francisco.
Denver, Colorado, the location of the mint at which it was produced.
If you mean mint marks, cents have only been issued at Philadelphia and West Point (no mint mark from either mint), San Francisco ("S") and Denver ("D").
Pennies are minted at three locations in the US; The San Francisco Mint, The Denver Mint and the Philadelphia Mint. Pennies from San Francisco have an "S" on them. Pennies from Denver have a "D" on them and pennies from Philadelphia have no letter.
The mint mark "S" on US coins means the coin was minted in San Francisco, California. For more information concerning mint marks visit the site at the related link, below. Coins produced at the Denver mint have a "D" and those at the Philadelphia mint have either no mint mark (for pennies and coins before 1980) or a "P" for all other denominations. Coins produced at the mint at West Point, NY (largely bullion coins, although some 1996 dimes were produced there) have a "W" mint mark.
For coins dated 1906 to the present, it means the coin was made at the Denver Mint. A "D" mint mark on an old (1838-1861) gold coin means it was made at the long-closed gold coin mint at Dahlonega, GA.
If it has one, it's under the date on the front of the coin, and will be a "S" or "D" if no mintmark it was made in Philadelphia, the Mint does not use "P" mintmarks on pennies.
The letter E isn't a mint mark for any mint. The mark is under the date with either a D for Denver or S for San Francisco. Philadelphia pennies don't have mint marks. For a 1939-D or -S, the value ranges from around 15 cents in worn condition up to $8 for a D and $5 for an S.