Whoops thank you just noticed that’s 2 reverses haha. Also got a pic of the rim cause I noticed what I assume is a copper center from inside the coin. Not sure if that can help you out.
!938 Lincoln Cents were not clad coins. They were solid bronze, composed of .950 copper and .050 tin and zinc. Clad cents were minted starting in 1982. (Copper plated zinc). Just curious but could you please explain what you mean by stripped. Thank you. If you mean that some metal has been stripped from the coin, the weight could determine that. If you're referring to the color, then toning, cleaning, etc. could help explain that.
I don't see any thing odd about it. Maybe super cleaned by soaking in acetone for a day or so. Copper pennies didn't have cladded layers did they ?
Thank you all I’m gonna assume it’s toning but I still wonder about the rim cause would it not have toned the copper center in the rim too? Mystery. @paddyman98 what do you think? (Sorry hard to focus on small objects)
That gold looking coin could have been plated. When you improperly scrub and clean old copper cents, (and strip off the surface metal) the resulting coin will be a variety of orange and pink hues.
American cents have never been clad. Cents minted starting from 1982 are plated. Circulation-strike dimes and quarters minted since 1965 are examples of clad coinage.