1 cent
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If this is a penny struck on a dime planchet, it's worth about $150 If this is a dime that was restruck with penniy dies, so details of both strikes show, it's worth about $500 If this is a dime that somebody smashed a penny into, leaving an impression, it has no added value. Proper authentication is required.
1. Coins are struck, not printed. Paper money is printed. 2. There is no such coin as a "dime penny". There are dimes and there are pennies. That done, if your "coin" has one side that looks like a dime and one that looks like a penny, it's a novelty item made by cutting apart 2 coins, swapping sides, and joining the 2 halves. It's worth the same as all those double-head and double-tail novelty coins that occasionally slip into circulation - a few bucks at a hobby or magic shop, but no interest to coin collectors.
Cents struck at the Philadelphia mint don't have a mint mark.
The Lincoln cent does not use a "P" mint mark. The coin was struck in Philadelphia.
It's just face value unless you find someone that wants it.
A 1927 British Penny looks very similar to all British Pennies minted from 1911 to 1936, other than the date. See the link below and look for the 1936 Penny towards the bottom.
He was born and raised at The Meadow Stud Farm owned by Penny Chenery(Tweedy)
It looks exactly the same as the 2010 or 2012 penny.
It looks like it HAS been rounded to the nearest penny.
The first US "penny's" were struck at the Philadelphia Mint in 1793.
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The US coin looks very much like a modern US penny
looks like. i had a penny on my desk now but its old so check for yourself.
Sure- see them below.
the first coin is the big silver thing on the shelf that looks like a platter. The second one is a penny and is on the second from bottom shelf on the right in front of a copper colored book.
No 1803 Indian Head penny's exist. The first one was struck in 1859.