Bicentennial coins were struck to commemorate the 200th anniversary of the founding of the USA. The values of these coins depends upon the denomination and the year it was minted.
All circulating bicentennial coinage is worth face value.
This may be a valuable error. I suggest you check with an expert.1773-1976 should be 1776-1976.
I'm assuming you are referring to the alternate designs on circulating US coinage during 1976? Unless they are proof or uncirculated, they aren't worth anything over face. Coins were produced in bulk with those designs, finding bicentennial half dollars, quarters and dollars are really easy to do so and can be pulled out of pocket change.
A bicentennial is the 200th anniversary of anything. For example, the American Bicentennial was 1976, the bicentennial of Abraham Lincoln's birth is 2009.
None of the Bicentennial coinage made for general circulation contain any silver or are worth more than face value. Only Proof and collectors coins sold from the US Mint are worth more.
All circulating bicentennial coinage is worth face value.
This may be a valuable error. I suggest you check with an expert.1773-1976 should be 1776-1976.
All US bicentennial coinage has the dual date 1776-1976 not 1973, none of the bicentennial half dollar coins made for general circulation contain any silver or are worth more than face value. Only Proof and collectors coins sold from the US Mint are worth more.
Could you please post a new question with more complete data? If you are referring to U.S. coinage, there were no Bicentennial coins issued in 1988. The 2 U.S bicentennial issues were of course dual-dated 1776-1976 coins for the Declaration of Independence, plus 1987 coins for the Constitution's 200th anniversary.
I'm assuming you are referring to the alternate designs on circulating US coinage during 1976? Unless they are proof or uncirculated, they aren't worth anything over face. Coins were produced in bulk with those designs, finding bicentennial half dollars, quarters and dollars are really easy to do so and can be pulled out of pocket change.
A bicentennial is the 200th anniversary of anything. For example, the American Bicentennial was 1976, the bicentennial of Abraham Lincoln's birth is 2009.
AnswerBicentennial CoinageThe Bicentennial Coinage Program was introduced in 1975. The Quarter, Half Dollar, and Dollar were all changed to include the dual date 1776-1976 and the reverse designs were also changed. These coins were struck in 1975 and 1976 which explains why no 1975 dated Quarters, Halves, or Dollars exist.These coins are all very common, with hundreds of millions of each piece struck. With this in mind it is safe to say that you can spend your bicentennial coinage. - http://coins.ha.com/common/questions.php#Bicentennial_CoinageIf it is in circulated condition, 25 cents.
None of the Bicentennial coinage made for general circulation contain any silver or are worth more than face value. Only Proof and collectors coins sold from the US Mint are worth more.
None of the Bicentennial coinage made for general circulation contain any silver or are worth more than face value. Only Proof and collectors coins sold from the US Mint are worth more.
None of the Bicentennial coinage made for general circulation contain any silver or are worth more than face value. Only Proof and collectors coins sold from the US Mint are worth more.
Special 40%-silver quarters, halves, and dollars were struck for sale to collectors. All circulation-strike Bicentennial coinage used standard clad (cupro-nickel bonded to copper) "sandwich" composition. yes, many re every year. you can tell if its silver because the ridges on the edge will not be half colored, but a solid silver
Sorry, but the U.S. Mint never issued a 3-piece bicentennial gold coin set. I have seen many sets of dual/dated (1776-1976) dollars, halves and quarters that have been gold plated by different company's and sold as "collectibles" but they have no numismatic value.