Philadelphia did not mark the Dime, Quarter or Kennedy Half dollar that year. Prior to 1980, Philadelphia did not use the P mint mark on any coins, with the following exceptions: > 1979 $1 coins > wartime nickels made from mid-1942 to 1945
In 1964, the US mint was making coins primarily at two sites, Philadelphia and Denver. To distinguish the coins, the Denver coins had a D under the date. The Philadelphia coins had no mint mark.
On 1964 JFK half dollars, the mint mark is located on the reverse side of the coin, just below the eagle's tail feathers. Depending on where the coin was minted, you may find either an "D" for Denver or "P" for Philadelphia, though the Philadelphia coins from this year do not have a mint mark. The mint mark indicates the facility where the coin was produced.
If your coin does not have a mint mark then it means it was minted at the Philadelphia mint. These coins are usually not as rare. However recently P mint marks were added to coins to indicate that they were made at the Philadelphia mint.
1964: either no mint mark (Philadelphia) or a small D (Denver) near the left side of the eagle's tail 1965-67: no mint mark, even though they were struck at all 3 mints 1968-79: either no mint mark (Philadelphia) or a small D (Denver) above the date; "S" (San Francisco) on proof coins. 1980-present: Philadelphia coins have a "P" mint mark; D and S are the same.
The mint mark "S" on US coins means the coin was minted in San Francisco, California. For more information concerning mint marks visit the site at the related link, below. Coins produced at the Denver mint have a "D" and those at the Philadelphia mint have either no mint mark (for pennies and coins before 1980) or a "P" for all other denominations. Coins produced at the mint at West Point, NY (largely bullion coins, although some 1996 dimes were produced there) have a "W" mint mark.
In 1964, the US mint was making coins primarily at two sites, Philadelphia and Denver. To distinguish the coins, the Denver coins had a D under the date. The Philadelphia coins had no mint mark.
On 1964 JFK half dollars, the mint mark is located on the reverse side of the coin, just below the eagle's tail feathers. Depending on where the coin was minted, you may find either an "D" for Denver or "P" for Philadelphia, though the Philadelphia coins from this year do not have a mint mark. The mint mark indicates the facility where the coin was produced.
There is no mint mark on Irish Euro coins, they were all minted at the same place.
As with all U.S. coins you have to know where the mint mark is located. Assuming you have only Washington quarters, coins dated 1932 to 1964 have the mint mark on the back, under the bow in the wreath. At that time Philadelphia did not use a mint mark so you'll only see a D for Denver or an S for San Francisco. Blank means Philly. Coins from 1965 to 1967 did not have any mint marks. Starting in 1968, coins from Denver have the mint mark on the front next to the bow in Washington's wig. Philadelphia coins are still blank. Starting in 1980, coins from Philadelphia have a P mint mark. If you want to find out where mint marks are on other types and dates, the site www.coinfacts.com lists locations on all U.S coins since 1838 when the first mint marks were used.
If your coin does not have a mint mark then it means it was minted at the Philadelphia mint. These coins are usually not as rare. However recently P mint marks were added to coins to indicate that they were made at the Philadelphia mint.
1964: either no mint mark (Philadelphia) or a small D (Denver) near the left side of the eagle's tail 1965-67: no mint mark, even though they were struck at all 3 mints 1968-79: either no mint mark (Philadelphia) or a small D (Denver) above the date; "S" (San Francisco) on proof coins. 1980-present: Philadelphia coins have a "P" mint mark; D and S are the same.
The mint mark P on American coins indicates that the coin was minted in Philadelphia.
The mint mark "S" on US coins means the coin was minted in San Francisco, California. For more information concerning mint marks visit the site at the related link, below. Coins produced at the Denver mint have a "D" and those at the Philadelphia mint have either no mint mark (for pennies and coins before 1980) or a "P" for all other denominations. Coins produced at the mint at West Point, NY (largely bullion coins, although some 1996 dimes were produced there) have a "W" mint mark.
Not at all. Denver-mint coins always carry a D mint mark. You're thinking of coins made in Philadelphia, which generally did not have a P mint mark until 1980. The exceptions for Philadelphia coins are: > 1942-1945 "war nickels" have a P > 1979 $1 coins have a P > Cents made in Philadelphia don't have a mint mark, regardless of their date.
Like all coins, the value is based on the date, the condition, the mint mark and the demand for it. There is no one value that can be applied to all coins with a specific mint mark.
Washington quarters dated from 1932 to 1964 is on the back side above the "R" in the word Quarter.No mint mark = PhiladelphiaS = San FranciscoD = Denver1965-1967 coins have no mint marks regardless of where they were struck.1968-1979 coins have a D to the right of Washington's wig if from Denver, and no mint mark if from Philadelphia1980 and later coins have a D or a P in the same location.1968 and later proof coins (sold in special sets to collectors) have an S to the right of Washington's wig.Standing Liberty quarters have the mint mark above and to the left of the date. The "M" on the opposite side is the monogram of the designer H. A. MacNeil.No mint mark = PhiladelphiaS = San FranciscoD = Denver
Not strictly, because that's really 2 different questions in one. The New Orleans Mint used an O mint mark from 1838 to 1861 and 1879 to 1909, and the first coins to carry a P mint mark were "war nickels" minted from 1942 to 1945, so the O mint mark definitely precedes the P mint mark. Because the Philadelphia Mint had been striking coins without using a P mint mark beginning in 1793, coins from that city can easily predate coins from New Orleans.