The "S" on the 1950 wheatback penny is the mint mark, for the San Francisco Mint. You might find the initials "VDB" on the back of some. Those are the initials of the person who designed the coin, Victor David Brenner. Should you find a 1909 "S" "VDB" penny, you have found a VERY rare coin as there were few minted.
It is the initials of Victor David Brenner, the coin's designer.
No a 1973 penny will not have VDB.
They're the initials of Victor David Brenner, who designed the front of the coin, as well as the reverse that was used from 1909 to 1958
There's not. It would have been on the back, near the bottom. The initials stand for Victor David Brenner. They were displayed on the back of pennies for part of 1909. The initials were restored, this time smaller, on Lincoln's shoulder, in 1918.
These initials belong to Victor David Brenner. He designed the front of a Lincoln penny.
The "S" on the 1950 wheatback penny is the mint mark, for the San Francisco Mint. You might find the initials "VDB" on the back of some. Those are the initials of the person who designed the coin, Victor David Brenner. Should you find a 1909 "S" "VDB" penny, you have found a VERY rare coin as there were few minted.
It is the initials of Victor David Brenner, the coin's designer.
The main difference between a 1909 VDB penny and a 1909 VDB S penny lies in the mint where they were produced. The 1909 VDB penny was minted at the Philadelphia Mint and bears the VDB initials on the reverse, while the 1909 VDB S penny was minted at the San Francisco Mint and also bears the VDB initials. The inclusion of the "S" mintmark on the 1909 VDB S penny indicates its San Francisco origin.
No a 1973 penny will not have VDB.
One of the rarest Lincoln coins is a penny. 1909S VDB. S designates that the coin was minted in San Francisco, CA and VDB are the initials of the designer of the coin.
They're the initials of Victor David Brenner, who designed the front of the coin, as well as the reverse that was used from 1909 to 1958
The initials VDB were those of Victor David Brenner, who designed the Lincoln cent.
All Lincoln cents from 1918 to date have the initials VDB it stands for Victor D. Brenner the designer of the coin.
A 1909-S VDB penny!
There's not. It would have been on the back, near the bottom. The initials stand for Victor David Brenner. They were displayed on the back of pennies for part of 1909. The initials were restored, this time smaller, on Lincoln's shoulder, in 1918.
"VDB" are the initials of Victor David Brenner, who designed the cent's obverse, as well as the famous wheat-ear reverse used from 1909 to 1958. They're in microscopic letters under the fold of Lincoln's coat, by the coin's edge.