1906?

Discussion in 'What's it Worth' started by Leesee, Apr 1, 2019.

  1. Leesee

    Leesee Member

    Anything anyone can tell me about this coin please?
     

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  3. Francois Chose

    Francois Chose New Member

    I believe this to be a U.S. 'Liberty Head' 5 cents piece, also known as 'V Nickel'.

    Does it seem to have a copper layer in the middle?
     
  4. Leesee

    Leesee Member

    It belongs to a friend of mine. I'll have to get back to you on that. I thought it was all silver in color, but not positive, been awhile.
     
  5. Francois Chose

    Francois Chose New Member

    I do not think it's worth more than $2 in that state.
     
  6. Leesee

    Leesee Member

    Ty
     
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  7. Francois Chose

    Francois Chose New Member

  8. thomas mozzillo

    thomas mozzillo Well-Known Member

    It is a common date Liberty nickel. Probably would grade ag-3 to good-4. Save it because you would be lucky to get $1.00 for it.
    The composition of this nickel is .750 Copper and .250 nickel.
     
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  9. Leesee

    Leesee Member

    Ty
     
  10. Leesee

    Leesee Member

  11. thomas mozzillo

    thomas mozzillo Well-Known Member

    Francois, welcome to Coin Talk. The US Mint never produced a nickel with a copper core. They made coins worth 5 cents that contained %90 percent silver that were called "Half Dimes", last produced in in 1873. They also made nickels from 1942-1945 that contained 35% silver, 56% copper, and 9% manganese.
     
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  12. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

    Also.. Coins are not printed. They are struck or minted.
    Only paper currency is printed.
     
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  13. Francois Chose

    Francois Chose New Member

    You're so right, thanks for helping with my lexical field :)
     
  14. littlehugger

    littlehugger Active Member

    Except for the war years when they were 35% silver, all nickels are 75% copper, even though they are silver colored, and we call them nickels.
     
  15. johnmilton

    johnmilton Well-Known Member

    The nickel 5 cent piece was introduced in 1866. During the Civil War all gold and silver coins, including the silver half dime, which was the forerunner to the nickel, were hoarded for their metal content. The 5 cent nickel was introduced to redeem and replace 5 cent fractional notes which had become an embarrassment to the govenment.

    After the nickel was introduced, people found it more convenient to use that the tiny half dime. The composition of the piece has not changed since 1866, except during World War II. Nickel was a vital war material, and for that reason it was removed from the 5 cent piece from mid 1942 until 1945.

    The coin you have is a common date in the series and well worn. It is not worth very much as a collectors’ item but of historic interest. Think of it this way. Teddy Roosevelt was president when it was issued.
     
  16. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    That is a common date Liberty Head or V nickel. It would be a G-4?at best and you can buy them for a buck or two.

    No silver.
     
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