60 pennies, 39 dimes and 1 half-dollar will give you $0.60 + $3.90 + $0.50 = $5.00
47 Quarters 83 Nickels
10 quarters and 5 nickels
7 nickels, 3 quarters
3 quarters & 2 nickels
3 quarters and 10 nickels.
20 quarters
In the United States, coins minted before 1965 typically contain silver, not 1942. The standard composition of dimes, quarters, and half-dollars included silver before 1965.Coins minted for circulation after 1964 in the US have not had silver content.
47 Quarters 83 Nickels
None. Last year of use - $1 coins : 1935 Half dollars : 90% silver, 1964; 40% silver, 1969 Dimes and quarters : 1964 Nickels : 1942 to 1945 only. Cents : never.
US dimes, quarters and half dollars dated 1964 and before contain 90% silver. Half Dollars from 1965 to 1970 contain 40% silver. The 1942 - 1945 nickels have 35% silver. Silver dollars dated 1935 and before have 90% silver.
All coins such as quarters, nickels, dimes, and half dollars
The only 1965-dated U.S. coins that contain silver are half dollars. They're only 40% silver, as opposed to 90% for dimes, quarters, and halves dated 1964 and earlier. Nickels are made of copper and nickel, not silver. The only nickels that contain any silver at all are the famous "war nickels" from 1942-45. They can be identified by a large mint mark on the back. They contain about 35% silver.
The were made in quarters, half-dollars, and silver dollars.
Half dollars, quarters, dimes, nickels and pennies were struck in 1949.
The denominations for 1959 were: Half dollars, Quarters, Dimes, Nickels and Cents.
Depends on the year and denomination of the coin. For coins intended for circulation: Dimes, Half-Dollars, Quarters and Dollars dated 1964 and prior are 90% silver Half-Dollars dated 1965-1970 are 40% silver Nickels dated 1942-1945 AND have a large mintmark over the Monticello (either a P, D or S) are 35% silver
7 quarters and 11 nickles