1944 is a common date for Mercury dimes and there are no significant varieties.
6-29-11>>> All Mercury Head dimes from 1940 to 1945 regardless of any mintmarks are considered very common, in average circulated condition they have the same retail values of $3.00.
It depends on the mintmark.
The 1944 Mercury dime was issued from all three US Mints.
Mercury dimes were never made of pure or solid silver. In 1944 they would have been made of an alloy of 90% silver and 10% copper. Today these dimes are worth around 2.00 dollars for their silver. However, they are rare in circulation of you usually pay over what it's worth when buying from a collector.
1944 is a common date for Mercury dimes and there are no significant varieties.
The 1944 Mercury Dimes (aka - Winged Liberty Head) were minted in Phillie, Denver, and San Francisco.
1944 is a common date for Mercury dimes and there are no significant varieties.
6-29-11>>> All Mercury Head dimes from 1940 to 1945 regardless of any mintmarks are considered very common, in average circulated condition they have the same retail values of $3.00.
It depends on the mintmark.
The 1944 Mercury dime was issued from all three US Mints.
Mercury dimes were never made of pure or solid silver. In 1944 they would have been made of an alloy of 90% silver and 10% copper. Today these dimes are worth around 2.00 dollars for their silver. However, they are rare in circulation of you usually pay over what it's worth when buying from a collector.
A 1944 mercury dime is worth $________ if it is in G4 condition- $1.25, F-12 condition $1.50, VF-20 $2.00, EF-40 condition, $4.00, MS-60 condition $10.00. There were 231,410,000, 1944 dimes minted that year.
A mercury dime has a face of a personification of liberty on it with a winged helmet. They are called mercury dimes because it looks like Mercury from mythology.
The most valuable U.S. dimes are typically the rare 1894-S Barber dime, which can fetch prices exceeding $1.9 million at auction, particularly in high-grade condition. Other valuable dimes include the 1916 Mercury dime and certain varieties of the 1942, 1943, and 1944 Mercury dimes, which can also be worth thousands due to their rarity and collector demand. Additionally, uncirculated or error dimes can significantly increase in value.
No, no proof dimes were made in 1944.
Assuming you're referring to a 1944 U.S. dime, the proper name for it is either Winged Liberty Head Dime or Mercury Dime. 1944 is a common date for Mercury dimes. In circulated condition, its value is based only on the silver it contains -- currently about 50 cents. Even nice uncirculated ones are generally only worth $4-$6 My guess is a Canadian dime with the portrait of King George. Still a common coin and worth even less than the US Mercury dime.