They were coins minted by the Philidelphia mint
a American coin is called a sent
Those are the mintmarks where the coins were made. D= Denver. P= Philadelphia.
Retail values for circulated coins are $2.00-$3.00 Mint state coins are $5.00
The Philadelphia mint (where the coin was made).
Just recently with the advent of bullion coins such as the American Silver Eagle. Coins intended for circulation were never 100% silver because silver is simply too soft of a metal for coinage. They were 90% silver in American coins until 1964 for dimes, quarters and half dollars, but other than bullion coins, no coins are made of 100% silver.
The mint mark P on American coins indicates that the coin was minted in Philadelphia.
The coins all have 13 stars on the edge this is normal and not an error.
P. N. Breton has written: 'List of corrected approximate values of Canadian coins and tokens' -- subject(s): Canadian Coins, Coins, Coins, Canadian, Medals, Prices
Yes! There lots of American coins. Trillions are in circulation right now!
Robert R. Van Ryzin has written: 'Twisted Tails' -- subject(s): American Coins, Anecdotes, Coins, American, History 'Fascinating facts, mysteries & myths about U.S. coins' -- subject(s): Miscellanea, American Coins 'Striking impressions' -- subject(s): American Coins, Coins, American, Collectors and collecting, Pictorial works
46 of 10p coins make £4.60
Lyman Haynes Low has written: 'Premium list' -- subject(s): American Coins, Canadian Coins, Coins, American, Coins, Canadian
Roman coins did not lead directly to American coins. European coins came after Roman ones, and people from Europe came to America and brought European coins with them, and when they made their own, they kind of copied the European ones.
A letter is usually a mint mark, indicating where a coin was made. For example, on American coins, P stands for Philadelphia, and D means Denver.
100
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Yes. They had coins. of course they hads coins stupid.. they wernt poor you no.... you thickos! :P