To the right of the word "ONE" on the reverse. D stands for Denver. The S stands for San Francisco.
If it's a U.S. dime with a date of 1944, it's a Mercury dime.
The coin is referred to as a Mercury Head or Winged Liberty Head Dime, 1944-S is a common date/mintmark coin and circulated examples valued at $2.00-$5.00
The mintmark is on the reverse of the coin. All Mercury Head dimes have the "W" on the front of the coin. It's the designers initial, Adolph A. Weinman. 1944 (regardless of any mintmark) is a common high mintage date. Most circulated coins are valued only for the silver they contain. It's worth about $2.00.
A US dime dated 1944 is a Mercury head dime, it's very common with a value of $2.00 just for the silver.
1944 is a common date for Mercury dimes and there are no significant varieties.
If it's a U.S. dime with a date of 1944, it's a Mercury dime.
The coin is referred to as a Mercury Head or Winged Liberty Head Dime, 1944-S is a common date/mintmark coin and circulated examples valued at $2.00-$5.00
See the related question about mintmark locations.
The mintmark is on the reverse of the coin. All Mercury Head dimes have the "W" on the front of the coin. It's the designers initial, Adolph A. Weinman. 1944 (regardless of any mintmark) is a common high mintage date. Most circulated coins are valued only for the silver they contain. It's worth about $2.00.
A US dime dated 1944 is a Mercury head dime, it's very common with a value of $2.00 just for the silver.
1944 is a common date for Mercury dimes and there are no significant varieties.
A '44 Mercury dime is worth about $2.50.
A mercury dime has a face of a personification of liberty on it with a winged helmet. They are called mercury dimes because it looks like Mercury from mythology.
You can see a photo of a 1936 Winged Liberty Head Dime (also known as a Mercury Dime) here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Mercury_dime.jpg Mercury Dimes were produced from 1916 through 1945 - a 1944 would differ from this photo only in the date and, possibly, the mintmark (the little "D" on the bottom back of the coin, just to the left of the bunch of sticks - the "D" means the coin was minted in Denver, an "S" would mean San Francisco, and no mintmark at all means that the coin was produced in Philadelphia).
The 'S' stands for the mintmark for the San Francisco mint.
From $2.00- $30,000.00 or so. But it depends on the DATE, MINTMARK and condition of the coin.
The 1939 Mercury Head dime is a common coin, circulated examples run from $3.00 to $5.00 depending on condition and mintmark.