450.
The reverse of the Winged Liberty Head ("Mercury") dime displays an ancient fasces, the symbol of power and justice, set off by an olive branch of peace. Plus the words "UNITED STATES OF AMERICA"; "E PLURIBUS UNUM"; and "ONE DIME".
The designer of the Winged Liberty Dime, more commonly called the Mercury Dime, Adolph Weinman, never said who the model was and no one has ever claimed to have been her. However, some evidence has been set forth indicating it may have been a woman named Elsie Stevens who was the wife of lawyer and poet Wallace Stevens.
Because of the silver content in the dime, quarter(s) and half dollar.
10 cents. It is struck in copper-nickel and unless it is a proof coin or in a special mint set, it has no collector premium just like any other dime struck after 1964.
450.
August 21, 2009 The 1983 no "S" dime proof set has a value of $1000.
The reverse of the Winged Liberty Head ("Mercury") dime displays an ancient fasces, the symbol of power and justice, set off by an olive branch of peace. Plus the words "UNITED STATES OF AMERICA"; "E PLURIBUS UNUM"; and "ONE DIME".
The S mint mark on a dime dated 1984 indicates that it was a proof dime minted in San Francisco for inclusion in special sets sold to collectors. My guess is that someone broke up the set and spent the coins for face value .... not a wise move, because what was formerly a coin worth maybe 60 cents as part of a set worth 7 or 8 bucks, is now only worth a dime.
They are worth 10 cents. There is no collector value to a new coin unless it is a proof set or an error.
The designer of the Winged Liberty Dime, more commonly called the Mercury Dime, Adolph Weinman, never said who the model was and no one has ever claimed to have been her. However, some evidence has been set forth indicating it may have been a woman named Elsie Stevens who was the wife of lawyer and poet Wallace Stevens.
Because of the silver content in the dime, quarter(s) and half dollar.
A world war ii silver dime set is worth 20 dollars
contains 1 dollar, half dollar,dime, nickel, and penny
10 cents. It is struck in copper-nickel and unless it is a proof coin or in a special mint set, it has no collector premium just like any other dime struck after 1964.
Not very much. It probably contains a steel cent (worth about 5 - 10 cents), a silver nickel (25 c - $1), and a Mercury dime ($1 - $1.50). A flea market booth will probably try to get $10.
A 1970 Uncirculated Mint set would not have a dime with a "S" mintmark, only a Proof set will have a dime with a "S" mintmark for that year, so no your mint set is not rare.