F is not the mint mark that is the inital of the name of the designer of the coin the mint mark is located on the back below 5 cents
1936 was the first year this error coin was struck at the Denver Mint and is the 3-1/2 legs variety not the 3-legged variety that was struck in 1937 at the same Mint.
There were no nickels made in 1932 or 1933.Most nickels dated 1934 through 1937 are worth anywhere from a dollar or so up to several dollars but it depends a lot on their condition and mint mark. For specific answers look for questions in the form "What is the value of a [date] US nickel?"
There can't be a 1966-S nickel because the Mint didn't use any mint marks from 1965 to 1967.
The "S" is the mint mark for the US Mint at San Francisco, California. All US Mint facilities place their own letter, which identifies them, on nearly all of the coins they mint. The larger than normal mint marks on the "war nickels" were placed there to indicate the coins were of a different alloy than previous nickels, containing 35% silver instead of nickel.
The letter "F" on the front of the coin is not a mint mark; it's the initial of the coin's designer James Earle Fraser. The mint mark position on all Buffalo (= Indian Head) nickels is located below the words "Five Cents" on the coin's reverse side. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1937 US nickel?" for more information.
Then it was made at the Philadelphia mint.
No. The 1937-Philadelphia is actually the second most common date of all buffalo nickels at 79.5 million.
F is not the mint mark that is the inital of the name of the designer of the coin the mint mark is located on the back below 5 cents
What you're seeing isn't an E and isn't a mint mark. It's an "F" which is the initial of the coin's designer James Earle Fraser. The mint mark, if there is one, would be on the back under the words FIVE CENTS. (FWIW, the US has never used an E mint mark) Please see the question "What is the value of a 1937 US nickel?" for more information.
about $1,945
Nickel Low-Down - 1937 was released on: USA: April 1937
The "P" is the mintmark of the Philadelphia Mint. All U.S. coins from 1980 to 2012 made at this mint have a "P" mintmark. It's just a nickel, spend it.
1936 was the first year this error coin was struck at the Denver Mint and is the 3-1/2 legs variety not the 3-legged variety that was struck in 1937 at the same Mint.
If you possess a 1937, a 1937-D, and a 1937-S Buffalo (aka - Indian Head) Nickel, their value in good condition (G4) are: $1.00, $1.00, and $1.50, respectively. If their mint state is MS60, the values are: $20, $35, and $30, respectively.
There were no nickels made in 1932 or 1933.Most nickels dated 1934 through 1937 are worth anywhere from a dollar or so up to several dollars but it depends a lot on their condition and mint mark. For specific answers look for questions in the form "What is the value of a [date] US nickel?"
Buffalo Bill never appeared on a U.S. nickel. A 1937 nickel has a picture of a Native American chieftan on the front, and a buffalo (animal) on the back.