This type of error of misstruck coins is called 'Brockage'. A Lincoln penny with this error is valued at $35.00
This could happen if two blank planchets got into the press together, causing on to get stamped with only the heads side, and the other to get stamped with only the tails side. This is a relatively rare error, and could be worth $50 to $100 or more. This could also be a normal quarter that somebody has altered. If it weighs significantly less than 5.67 grams, then I would say that it has been altered and has no added value.
"Double pressed" is not a normal term applied to coins. Please post a new question with more details; e.g.: > Does it have 2 images of Lincoln on one side and 2 of the Lincoln Memorial on the other? > Does it have the same image on each side?
Answer I imagine QUITE A BIT! Although, I am anything but an expert on coins, I can garauntee you that there are some really obsessed collectors out there who would give a pretty penny (pun intended) for that. The US mint (and the mints of most other countries as well.) are really obsessed with searching out the mis-struck coins and they also do a good job of preventing them from ever even happening in the first place, what you have there could be worth a LOT of money. SAVE IT!!!! (or give it to me if you feel like it.) In reality ... If this is a mint error, it happened when two coin blanks entered the stamping machine at the same time. One would have Lincoln's head stamped on one side and a blank back, and the other would have the Lincoln Memorial stamped on the back and a blank front. Usually, this will also cause a mis-shaping of both coins, because there is twice as much metal in the press as there's supposed to be. These error coins can be worth well over $100, however... This error is magnitudinally rarer than the number of people asking questions about this type of coin. Therefore I have to believe that what you have is an altered coin -- something somebody altered after the coin left the mint -- most likely one of two pieces used for a "Magician's Coin", and has no value. See : varietynickels (dot) com/articles/twotailed (dot) htm You can be sure by getting a professional first-hand appraisal. Check out the ANACS website for a list of shows where you can take your coin and get it examined : anacs (dot) com/shows (dot) html Good luck! (replace (dot) with . when copying the link)
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A rhombus. (A square is, of course, also a rhombus.)
the Lincoln statue and other things as well
the lincoln statue and other things as well
Your off-center error cent will be worth $2 to $10, depending on how much off-center it is and how nice of condition it's in.
To get to the other side?
The name is Lincoln rather than Lincon.The building is an image of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington DC
They visit the Washington D.C. zoo, Washington Memorial, Lincoln Memorial and other places.
THERE ISTHE LINCOLN MEMORIAL, JEFFERSON MEMORIAL, AND ALOT OF OTHER THINGS TRUST ME IVE BEEN THERE
The Lincoln Memorial honors President Lincoln. The Washington Memorial honors President Washington. Mount Rushmore honors presidents also. There are four presidents carved there. They are George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt and Abraham Lincoln.
One of the speeches was the Gettysburg address, written by Lincoln. The other was the second inaugural address.
A 1984 nickel with one side stamped with Jefferson and the other side blank is likely a novelty coin created after minting. It does not hold any numismatic value to collectors and is worth face value, which is 5 cents.
Henry Bacon built the Lincoln Memorial in order to honor the 16th President of the United States, Abraham Lincoln. It took eight years to build the memorial which was dedicated in 1922. Several other monuments and statues have been built to honor past presidents.
This could happen if two blank planchets got into the press together, causing on to get stamped with only the heads side, and the other to get stamped with only the tails side. This is a relatively rare error, and could be worth $50 to $100 or more. This could also be a normal quarter that somebody has altered. If it weighs significantly less than 5.67 grams, then I would say that it has been altered and has no added value.