Click image to see a larger view. Lincoln Cents. Look under the date on the front on the front of the coin. Two Cent Coin. Three Cent Coin. It is located to the right of the "C" on the back of the coin.
Shield Nickels. Liberty Nickels. Indian Head Nickels aka Buffalo Nickels. Jefferson Nickels. Click image to see a larger view During the War Years , the mint mark is located above the Dome of Monticello. Click image to see a larger view , the mint mark is located near the date on the front of the coin. Click image to see a larger view to present , below Liberty and the date on the front of the coin. Half Dimes. Bust Dimes. Liberty Seated Dimes. However, the D is a tremendous rarity, bringing six figure prices whenever it is offered.
What's the difference between these three coins? The mintmark. Any collector needs to be able to spot the mintmark both on a coin and within the coin's description. The latter is easy - the term "D" means that the coin is dated and carries a 'D' mintmark. If the date of a US coin is written without a mintmark, it means that the coin has no mintmark and was usually minted in Philadelphia.
Coins without mintmarks made in Philadelphia are sometimes referred to as, for example, P, even though there may be no mintmark on the coin. Most exceptions to the rule that US coins without mintmarks are from Philadelphia have occurred in the last 40 years. Although the Philadelphia mint has been operating continuously since , most Philadelphia coins do not have a mintmark S: San Francisco to date.
Now mints collector coins only. If you consider US coins to include issues struck for the Philippines both under Sovereignty of the US and as a Commonwealth, you would have to add the 'M' mintmark for the Manila mint to the above list. For the most part, mintmarks on circulating coins appear on the reverse of the coin if the coin was dated or earlier. No mintmarks appeared on any US coins dated , but in , the four circulating coins that had not already had an obverse mintmark had the mintmark moved to the obverse.
A good rule of thumb when searching for a mintmark is to look near the date or at the bottom of the reverse, often below the wreath or the eagle.
Philadelphia mint coins in this series minted today still do not carry a mintmark; these are the only US circulating coins that bear that distinction. The 'F' below the date at least when the date is visible is the initial of the designer, James Earle Fraser.
Jefferson Nickel: Copper-Nickel pieces dated and to the right of Monticello on the reverse. Silver pieces dated a large mintmark above Monticello on the reverse.
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