If you found it in change, 5 cents. Billions were minted.
Not WHO but WHAT. Except for the special Lewis and Clark commemorative nickels minted in 2004 and 2005, all Jefferson nickels have a picture of his famous house. It's name, Monticello, is right under the picture.
There is no such thing as an 1803 U.S. nickel. You have a Lewis & Clark commemorative nickel that was minted in 2004. Turn it over and look next to Jefferson's portrait. These are worth exactly 5 cents.
The US minted four different nickels to honor the Lewis and Clark expedition's bicentennial during 2004-2005. In circulated condition, none are worth more than face value.
There is no such thing as an 1803 U.S. nickel.You have a Lewis & Clark commemorative nickel that was minted in 2004. Turn it over and look next to Jefferson's portrait.These are worth exactly 5 cents.there's no such thing as a 1803 nickel the date of when the nickel is made is on the front next to Jefferson's portrait and also the us mint did not start making nickels until 1866
There's no such coin. The U.S. did not mint nickels until 1866. If your coin has a picture of Thomas Jefferson on the front, it's a modern commemorative nickel issued to mark the 200th anniversary of the Lewis and Clark expedition. It's worth exactly 5 cents.
Not WHO but WHAT. Except for the special Lewis and Clark commemorative nickels minted in 2004 and 2005, all Jefferson nickels have a picture of his famous house. It's name, Monticello, is right under the picture.
There is no such thing as an 1803 U.S. nickel. You have a Lewis & Clark commemorative nickel that was minted in 2004. Turn it over and look next to Jefferson's portrait. These are worth exactly 5 cents.
5 cents. It was mass produced for the Lewis and Clark commemorative in the fall of 2006. The nickel had different designs over the 2004-2006 mintings.
Since 1938 the US nickel has had a picture of Thomas Jefferson on the front. The back side has featured a picture of his house, Monticello, for all years except 2004 and 2005 when four special designs were used in honor of the Lewis and Clark Bicentennial.
Monticello was the home of President Thomas Jefferson.
It's an ordinary circulation nickel worth 5 cents. As you can see from looking at your pocket change, ALL current nickels except those made during the Lewis and Clark bicentennial (2004-2005) have a picture of Jefferson's home on the reverse side.
The US minted four different nickels to honor the Lewis and Clark expedition's bicentennial during 2004-2005. In circulated condition, none are worth more than face value.
There is no such thing as an 1803 U.S. nickel.You have a Lewis & Clark commemorative nickel that was minted in 2004. Turn it over and look next to Jefferson's portrait.These are worth exactly 5 cents.there's no such thing as a 1803 nickel the date of when the nickel is made is on the front next to Jefferson's portrait and also the us mint did not start making nickels until 1866
There's no such coin. The U.S. did not mint nickels until 1866. If your coin has a picture of Thomas Jefferson on the front, it's a modern commemorative nickel issued to mark the 200th anniversary of the Lewis and Clark expedition. It's worth exactly 5 cents.
Please turn the coin over and look next to Jefferson. You'll see the date 2004. You have a commemorative nickel issued to mark the 200th anniversary of the Lewis and Clark expedition. It's worth exactly 5 cents.
The tail side (the technical term is "reverse") of the current US penny is the "Union Shield", a shield that has vertical stripes and "E Pluribus Unum" written across the top of it, partially obscured by scrollwork saying "One Cent". Up until 2009, the most recent design of th e US penny had the Lincoln Memorial on the reverse (this is the same building depicted on the back of the five dollar bill). In 2009, four "commemorative" designs were issued for the bicentennial of Lincoln's birth. Prior to the Lincoln Memorial reverse, the penny featured two stalks of wheat. The nickel's reverse is a depiction of Monticello, Jefferson's home. In 2004 and 2005 five commemorative reverses (for the approximate bicentennial of the Lewis and Clark expedition) were issued.
Since 1938 the US nickel (5¢ piece) has carried various images of President Thomas Jefferson on the front. The back has shown a front view of his home, Monticello, for all years of issue except 2004 and 2005 when it depected various scenes honoring the Lewis and Clark expedition which Jefferson championed.