You have what's known as a "Magician's Coin".
This is NOT something that was done at the Mint.
Somebody made this by altering two normal coins and gluing the altered pieces back together. Use a magnifier to check just inside the rim on one side of the coin -- you are looking for the seam where the two pieces were joined -- it could be on either side of the coin.
This type of novelty item sells regularly on eBay.com for a couple of dollars.
I ,
Dan Moore The Working Man's Rare Coins http:/www.workingmancoins.com
This is not a mint error. The coin has been altered some how, likely two halves glued together..It has no numismatic value.
Nothing. It's a fake. Please take the time to use this site's Search feature. Enter the word DOUBLE and you'll find that this question has been asked hundreds of times.
The value depends on the type and severity of the the error. If nothing else, it contains two cents' worth of copper.
It's a privately manufactured novelty coin or a home made glued together kind that has no value at all.
Two cents for the copper.
This is not a mint error. The coin has been altered some how, likely two halves glued together..It has no numismatic value.
Nothing. It's a fake. Please take the time to use this site's Search feature. Enter the word DOUBLE and you'll find that this question has been asked hundreds of times.
Wheat cents are a variety of Lincoln cents minted from 1909 to 1958, currently worth about two cents. The Lincoln memorial pennies are still face value.
A two-headed penny.
The value depends on the type and severity of the the error. If nothing else, it contains two cents' worth of copper.
It's a privately manufactured novelty coin or a home made glued together kind that has no value at all.
The other date is likely 1964 the year Kennedy was killed. It's a novelty con with no collectible value.
Its really impossible to say, but since flipping a coin has been documented since Roman times (and a two headed coin is often used as a trick), it is quite possible to say that the first two-headed Lincoln pennies were created soon after the first Lincoln cents were struck in 1909.
1,000,000$
5$ bill and the penny.
The coin that is not a penny is a quarter. The other one IS a penny.
Two cents for the copper.