bubbadog wrote: So much fun to do as a family!
shinnosuke wrote:Uh, oh, gang. A 10 year old. Let's mind our P's and Q's.
Hey, a big bowwow to you, bubbadog! Glad you have decided to learn about real coins. Maybe you'll get lucky and find a silver dime in a roll from the bank. It's rare, but it can happen. Good luck.
bubbadog wrote:Thanks for the warm welcome! I got a call from work from Bubba asking why I hadn't dumped and got him new nickels to sort. I've created a monster!
RedRockGirl (My online alter-ego)
henrysmedford wrote:shinnosuke wrote:Uh, oh, gang. A 10 year old. Let's mind our P's and Q's.
Hey, a big bowwow to you, bubbadog! Glad you have decided to learn about real coins. Maybe you'll get lucky and find a silver dime in a roll from the bank. It's rare, but it can happen. Good luck.
You mean P,D,S
scyther wrote:henrysmedford wrote:shinnosuke wrote:Uh, oh, gang. A 10 year old. Let's mind our P's and Q's.
Hey, a big bowwow to you, bubbadog! Glad you have decided to learn about real coins. Maybe you'll get lucky and find a silver dime in a roll from the bank. It's rare, but it can happen. Good luck.
You mean P,D,S
And sometimes O.
Finding Mint Marks
A mint mark is a small letter (D and S being the most commonly encountered) somewhere on the coin. A mint mark tells you where the coin was made. Many coins also have the designer's initials hidden somewhere in the design. This is not the mint mark. The mint mark is almost always directly on the field and not usually part of any other device.
Because many American collectors collect coins by date and mint mark, the presence of a mint mark can (and often does) change the value of a coin considerably. This is because it can affect the rarity of the coin. For example, in the case of 1894 dimes, having the 'S' mint mark adds tens of thousands of dollars to the value of the coin as only 24 were minted.
Many American coins lack a mint mark. That is because in the beginning, there was only one mint, Philadelphia. So any coin lacking a mint mark is from the Philadelphia mint (or extremely recently, it might also be from West Point, but there is no way to tell.)
The following mint marks exist:
C - Charlotte, North Carolina (Early Gold Coinage Only 1838-1861)
CC - Carson City, Nevada (1870-1893)
D - Dahlonega, Georgia (Early Gold Coinage Only 1838-1861)
D - Denver, Colorado (1906-Present)
O - New Orleans, Louisiana (1838-1909)
P - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (War time nickels and 1982-Present non-copper coinage)
S - San Francisco (1854-Date -- last regular issue 1974)
W - West Point (1984-Date -- Special collector issues only, otherwise they mimic Philadelphia minted coins)
No mark - Philadephia, Pennsylvania (1793 to date)
The following list provides a hint as to where to look for the mint mark. Any coin not listed was probably only made in Philadelphia and thus lacks a mint mark.
Seated Liberty Coinage - On the reverse under the wreath or eagle with some minor exceptions.(CC, O, S)
Barber Coinage - On the reverse under the wreath or eagle tail. (O, S, D)
Indian Head Cents - 1908-09 only (S) on the reverse under the wreath.
Lincoln Cents - On the obverse under the date. (D,S)
Three cent silver - 1851 only (O) to the right of the C
V Nickel (1912 only (D,S)) - Under the dot to the left of the date.
Buffalo Nickel - (D,S) - Under the "Five Cents" on the reverse.
Jefferson Nickel - (D,S) -
Before 1965 Reverse to the right of building.
Since 1968 on the obverse under the date.
Wartime Silver (1942-45) on the reverse large above the building.
Mercury Dime - (D,S) Reverse to the left of the bottom of the faces.
Roosevelt Dime - (D,S) Reverse to the left of the bottom of the torch.
Standing Liberty Quarter - (D,S) To the left of Liberty's feet on the obverse.
Washington Quarter - (D,S)
1932-1964 Under the olive branch on the reverse.
1968-1998 Obverse to the right of the bow.
1999- still to the right of the bow.
Walking Liberty Half - (D,S) 1916-1917 Obverse under "In God We Trust"
1917-1947 - Reverse to the left of "Half Dollar" close to the rim Franklin Half Dollar - (D,S) Above the Bell
Kennedy Half Dollar -(D,S)
1964 - Under the left claw of the eagle.
1968-Present - Obverse under the bust of Kennedy. Trade Dollar - (CC,S) Reverse above D of Dollar.
Morgan Dollar - (CC, O, S, D) Reverse below wreath.
Peace Dollar - (D,S) Reverse Below ONE.
Eisenhower Dollar - Obverse under bust.
SBA Dollar - Obverse to the left of the bust. (always present)
Sacajaweah Dollar - To be determined. 2000 is close.
Gold Coins - In general, look under the tail of the eagles or wreaths on the reverse.
Incuse Eagle - To the left of the arrows under the eagle on the reverse.
St Gauden's - Above date (The A/G under the date is the designer's initials)
Commemoratives - Just look around the coin carefully. Remember the mint mark is generally in the field, not part of the device. Possible mint marks are (D, S, W).
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shinnosuke wrote:Uh, oh, gang. A 10 year old. Let's mind our P's and Q's.
Hey, a big bowwow to you, bubbadog! Glad you have decided to learn about real coins. Maybe you'll get lucky and find a silver dime in a roll from the bank. It's rare, but it can happen. Good luck.
moneydog wrote:awesome its a great time also filling the penny albums great babby sitter also
TheJonasCollegeFund wrote:OH NO.....I can feel the "fever" in the air. Another one getting..........the............"FEVER"!
Best of luck gaining control of future cravings for boxes, or rolls, or bags, or just the ones seeing laying lonesome in EVERY parking lot!
It's ok here.
A great Christmas gift would be a metal detector.... !!!!
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