No, most 1955 cents are not that valuable. There were only a few that were double-struck*. You can see a nice picture of one by using the link provided.
(*) As you have noted from other postings, coins are said to be minted or struck, not "stamped". I don't know why, it's just what's done.
This type of error is called 'Off Center'. The more of the impression missing, the more it is valued, but those with a readable date and mint mark are the most valuable. If your penny (with no date) is an Indian Head penny it is worth $55.00. If it is a steel penny it is worth $45.00. Wheat pennies and Lincoln Memorial pennies are only worth $3.50.
1944s wheat Penny
70 years old
About 3 cents.
1 cent
If the coin is double-struck, it can be worth up to $30,000. So if you see double, hold onto it!
The 1909-S V.D.B.
Its maid of real copper
All error coins need to be seen, take it to a coin dealer for an accurate assessment.
Wheat cents were struck from 1909 to 1958
The most valuable ones are the 1943 copper penny, and the even more rare 1944 steel penny.
It's worth about 3 cents. Post-WWII wheat cents aren't rare or valuable.
The most valuable "Wheat Penny" is an error coin not a regular issue coin. The only known example of a 1943-D Lincoln cent that was struck on a bronze planchet by mistake instead of steel, sold in 2010 for a little more than 1.7 MILLION dollars. For regular issue coins the 1909-S VDB is still the King.
Lincoln, Wheat Ear Reverse (Wheat Penny's) cents were struck from 1909 to 1958. A 1888 penny is a Indian Head cent with an average value of $1.00-$3.00 for most coins. NOTE: The wreath on the reverse is Oak not Wheat.
According to "wikipedia" the first Wheat backed pennies were not struck until 1909.
It really depends upon the condition but wheat pennies are not worth much. Some are rarer than others, such as a 1959s penny or something of that nature.If they are BU (brilliant un-circulated) they are certainly worth more money. Those wheat pennies are not all that valuable, unless you have an entire collection completed and the coins are in very good condition.http://americanconnj.comThe last date for a wheat penny is 1958 and no 1959s were ever struck.
3-10 cents on average. It's not a rare or valuable coin.