Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Here are 10 U.S. dimes that may have some additional value due to their rarity or uniqueness, listed from oldest to newest: 10 Valuable U.S. Dimes Still in Circulation 1. 1965 Roosevelt Dime, No ...
Today, there exists 11 to 15 in collectors’ hands. 1838-O Capped Bust Half Dollar – The New Orleans mint was the first to produce silver coins, striking only 20 of this particular piece. Nine ...
The Seated Liberty dollar was the first coin to be struck at the Carson City Mint; the first to be issued were 2,303 pieces paid to a Mr. A. Wright on February 11, 1870. [43] The dollar was struck at Carson City from 1870 to 1873, with the largest mintage, 11,758, in 1870.
1870 Silver Dollar United States Stack's Bowers: May 2003 $1,057,500 1792 pattern Disme United States Heritage Auctions [41] January 2015 $1,057,500 1795 Nine Leaves BD-3 $10 United States Auction '89 Sotheby's/Stack's Bowers: September 2015 $1,057,500 1852 Humber $10 K-10 Territorial United States Augustus Humbert Heritage Auctions: April 2013
The American twenty-cent piece is a coin struck from 1875 to 1878, but only for collectors in the final two years. Proposed by Nevada Senator John P. Jones, it proved a failure due to confusion with the quarter, to which it was close in both size and value.
In 2016, one of these rare dimes sold at auction for $1,997,50. 1873-CC MS65 No Arrows Liberty Seated Dime. Another no arrows dime worth a pretty penny is the 1873-CC MS65 No Arrows Liberty Seated ...
According to mint records for 1870, no half dimes had been minted in San Francisco; yet it was a genuine 1870-S half dime. At an auction later that same year, the 1870-S half dime sold for $425,000. It is believed that another example may exist—along with other denominations minted that year in San Francisco—in the cornerstone of the old ...
The early dimes were 90% silver and 10% copper, but rising silver prices caused the Mint to change the mix to 75% copper and 25% nickel in the 1960s. The vast majority of Roosevelt Dimes are worth ...