544,375,000 were made for circulation 2,934,631 were struck as proof coins
The mintage data for US Lincoln cents dated 2001 is: 13,519,196,000 this includes Proof coins.
9 BILLION (Excluding "Proof" coins) 4.6 are from the Philadelphia Mint. 4.4 are from the Denver Mint.
13.1 BILLION (Excluding "Proof" coins) 6.6 BILLION are from the Philadelphia Mint. 6.5 are from the Denver Mint.
Total 9.2 BILLION (Excluding "Proof" coins) 4.6 BILLION are from the Philadelphia Mint. 4.6 BILLION are from the Denver Mint.
Their are a few answers. For pennies no mint mark means Philadelphia or for proof pennies which are only in proof sets S means San Francisco.
2010 Proof sets are currently available from the Royal Mint.
Proof pennies are only made at San Francisco. It's not a proof. It is just a penny worth a penny.
1980-S pennies were only issued in proof sets. At a minimum, they are worth about 75 cents. The highest grade proof condition pennies are worth $4.00 and up.
544,375,000 were made for circulation 2,934,631 were struck as proof coins
2009 pennies were made in mass productions. Currently a 2009 penny is only worth a penny unless it is a proof. If it is a proof it will have the mintmark "S" below the date.
Philadelphia: 5,237,600,000 Denver: 6,360,065,000 San Francisco (proof coins only): 2,543,401
The mintage data for US Lincoln cents dated 2001 is: 13,519,196,000 this includes Proof coins.
It would depend on your definition of "old". If you refer to British decimal Pennies, the only year they have not been struck for general circulation was 1972, but there were 1972 Proof Pennies struck. If you refer to British predecimal Pennies, they have been predecimal Pennies in circulation since the late 9th century AD. To keep it manageable we will only look at 20th century Pennies. Pennies were not struck in 1923, 1924, 1925, 1941, 1942, 1943 and 1955 to 1960 inclusive. To be entirely fair, there were 1933, 1952 and 1954 Pennies struck, but they were struck as "pattern" or "proof" coins in very small quantities ranging from 1 to maybe 8 coins. These are considered extremely rare if not unique, and are locked up in various collections or museums.
For the year 1900 a total of 66,831,502 business strikes were minted & 2,262 proof coins were struck.
9 BILLION (Excluding "Proof" coins) 4.6 are from the Philadelphia Mint. 4.4 are from the Denver Mint.
PCGS lists 108,137,143 circulation cents and 1,475 proof Indian Head cents struck in 1907