On the reverse side near the eagle's tail. Philadelphia issues do not have a mint mark, only Denver.
On the reverse, to the left of the stem of the olive branch. D = Denver, blank = Philadelphia.
Oh, dude, the mint mark on a Kennedy half dollar is located on the obverse side of the coin, just above the date. It can be either a "D" for Denver, "S" for San Francisco, or "P" for Philadelphia. So, like, just flip that coin over and take a peek, no big deal.
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
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.
It is located below the date.
It's not a mint mark. The initials FG stand for Frank Gasparro, who designed the reverse of the coin. Gilroy Roberts designed the obverse. The only mintmark a 1964 Kennedy half can have is a "D." It's to the left of the olive branch in the eagles claw.
On the reverse, to the left of the stem of the olive branch. D = Denver, blank = Philadelphia.
1964 Kennedy halves are extremely common, currently worth about $10 for the silver content. Also, V isn't a mint mark on any US coin.
Oh, dude, the mint mark on a Kennedy half dollar is located on the obverse side of the coin, just above the date. It can be either a "D" for Denver, "S" for San Francisco, or "P" for Philadelphia. So, like, just flip that coin over and take a peek, no big deal.
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
More than what? If you're comparing it to a 1964 coin without a mint mark, then no, it's not more valuable.
The letter D is the mint mark so it can't both have a mint mark and not have a mint mark.Please see the related question for more information.
The letter D is the mint mark so it can't both have a mint mark and not have a mint mark.Please see the related question for more information.
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.
It is located below the date.
If it has one it'll be on the reverse below the eagle. No mint mark = Philadelphia, D = Denver.
From 1946 to 1964, the mint mark position was at the bottom left of the torch on the back of the coin. No mint mark = Phila. S = San Francisco D = Denver