All circulation dimes dated 1965 and later are made of copper-nickel, not silver.
A 1951 Roosevelt dime is very common, most are only valued for the silver in them, about $1.35.
Franklin D. Roosevelt first appeared on the US dime in 1946 and is still on it. Eisenhower has never been on a dime, only dollar coins starting in 1971 to the end of 1978. The value of the 1959 dime is about one dollar, just for the silver.
The 1914 Barber dime is a common coin. Value is $4.00-$8.00 for most coins.
For the answer, visit: http://www.coinflation.com/coins/1946-1964-Silver-Roosevelt-Dime-Value.html
If it is a circulated dime, then it is worth about $1.00, mostly depending on the value of silver
what is the value for an American 1909 silver dime
If it has any wear at all the value is for the silver only about $1.00. A uncirculated 1942 dime is about $2.50
Nothing. There is no such thing. The most silver any dime has is 90%. This is most likely what you have.
A 1951 Roosevelt dime is very common, most are only valued for the silver in them, about $1.35.
Franklin D. Roosevelt first appeared on the US dime in 1946 and is still on it. Eisenhower has never been on a dime, only dollar coins starting in 1971 to the end of 1978. The value of the 1959 dime is about one dollar, just for the silver.
With silver at $41.39 per ounce, as of 9-10-11 a 90% silver dime has a Melt Value of $3.99.
1902 and 1907 silver dimes
The 1914 Barber dime is a common coin. Value is $4.00-$8.00 for most coins.
For the answer, visit: http://www.coinflation.com/coins/1946-1964-Silver-Roosevelt-Dime-Value.html
It is FDR on the dime, not Eisenhower. All Roosevelt dimes are common and only worth silver melt value. At the time of writing it is around $2.25 or so in silver.
If it is a circulated dime, then it is worth about $1.00, mostly depending on the value of silver
A proof coin has a retail value of about $1.00