None have any silver value. US nickels made from 1866 to mid-1942 and from 1946 to the present are made of a copper-nickel alloy, not silver.
1942-1945 are the only years silver nickels were struck, 1956 nickels are still in circulation today and are worth 5 cents.
The Buffalo nickels were made from 1913 - 1938
The only years silver was used in US nickels was 1942-1945, the coin is face value.
Buffalo nickels were minted from 1913 to early 1938. They occasionally turned up in change as late as the 1970s.
Never. They're called nickels for a reason. The only U.S. nickels to contain any silver at all, at 35%, were "war" nickels dated 1942-1945. Nothing before or after was made of silver.
1942-1945 are the only years silver nickels were struck, 1956 nickels are still in circulation today and are worth 5 cents.
The Buffalo nickels were made from 1913 - 1938
The only years silver was used in US nickels was 1942-1945, the coin is face value.
Buffalo nickels were made for 22 years at 3 different Mints. A date and mintmark (if any) is needed. Post new question.
Buffalo nickels were minted from 1913 to early 1938. They occasionally turned up in change as late as the 1970s.
Sorry, none of those contain any silver. The only years there are any silver in the nickels are during WWII -- 1942 to 1945 -- and they will be identified by a large "P", "D", or "S" above the dome of the building on the back of the coin. Current value for circulated silver nickels is about 20 cents apiece.
Never. They're called nickels for a reason. The only U.S. nickels to contain any silver at all, at 35%, were "war" nickels dated 1942-1945. Nothing before or after was made of silver.
The only years the US made nickels with silver were 1942-1945 so if you still think it's made from silver take it to a coin dealer for an assessment.
The only years US nickels were struck in silver was 1942-1945. 1914 is a Buffalo nickel. Coins in average circulated condition are valued at $15.00-$30.00 depending on grade.
This is one of the years they made nickels partially out of silver. At current silver values, it's worth about 50 cents.
No such coin. Buffalo Nickels are very different from war nickels. Buffalo (or Indian Head) nickels were struck from 1913-1938. The Jefferson nickel series started in 1938 but in the years of WW II nickel was needed for the war effort so the government replaced the nickel with silver in the Jefferson nickels from late in 1942 to 1945 creating what is now called "War Nickels" these coins are identified by large mint marks on the back of the coin above the dome of Monticello. The Jefferson nickel returned to the prewar composition in 1946 and is the same today.
No. The only years nickels contained silver were 1942-45.