They were minted at Philadelphia, Denver and San Francisco. They were minted in 1964.
1964 US nickels were minted at Philadelphia (no mint mark at that time) and Denver ("D")
The US Jefferson Nickel has been minted at 3 US mints; Denver, Colorado; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and San Francisco, California since 1938.
No. It's the same copper/nickel blend as every* other U.S. nickel minted since 1866. There were a billion of them minted in 1964, and it's worth 5 cents. *The only U.S. nickels to contain any silver are the "war nickels" of 1942-1945.
They were made from the very first quarters till 1964 being the last year.
The US first minted nickels in 1866.You may have a 2004 nickel minted to commemorate the Lewis and Clark expedition. It carries the date 1803 on the back to indicate the year that the expedition began.
1964 US nickels were minted at Philadelphia (no mint mark at that time) and Denver ("D")
None in circulating quarters. Except for special proof sets and some uncirculated bicentennial sets, all quarters minted after 1964 are made of copper and nickel.
The US Jefferson Nickel has been minted at 3 US mints; Denver, Colorado; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and San Francisco, California since 1938.
No. It's the same copper/nickel blend as every* other U.S. nickel minted since 1866. There were a billion of them minted in 1964, and it's worth 5 cents. *The only U.S. nickels to contain any silver are the "war nickels" of 1942-1945.
1913-1938 are the years the us mint minted "buffalo" nickel's.. Only Jefferson nickels were minted in 1943. 1943 nickel is usually called a "War Nickel" (minted during war time w/ silver) Hope I didn't confuse the question...
If you are referring to a Washington Quarter that was minted from 1932-1964, it contains: 90% silver and 10% copper. If it was minted from 1965 to the present, the composition is: 2 outer layers of 75% copper and 25% nickel bonded to a pure copper core, for an overall percentage of about 92% copper and 8% nickel.
Silver 3¢ pieces were minted from 1851 to 1873 Copper-nickel ones were minted from 1865 to 1889
They were made from the very first quarters till 1964 being the last year.
Same as post-1964 nickels: NONE. The only exception is for nickels minted 1942-45.
The US first minted nickels in 1866.You may have a 2004 nickel minted to commemorate the Lewis and Clark expedition. It carries the date 1803 on the back to indicate the year that the expedition began.
All U.S. nickels minted since 1866 (except for 1942-1945) are 75% copper and 25% nickel.
75% copper and only 25% nickel, the same composition used since 1866 except during WWII. The only US nickels that contained any silver were special "war nickels" minted from late 1942 to 1945. These coins are 56% copper, 35% silver and 9% manganese.