Not to me anyway, though I am not a Lincoln cent expert. To me a Lincoln cent takes on an almost pinkish hue when it is polished. I think those have been stored in somebody's collection and not exposed to the elements so they are reasonably well preserved.
Hard to tell from photos...quick way, look at the edge with a magnifier, if the edge is squared off at a 90 degree angle, it's a proof. If the edge has a flat part and a slant to the rim of the coin, it's a commercial strike.
Denver has never made proofs. Philly and then San Francisco. Most/all of those coins look normal to me. There are still a number of 1958, 1959 and 1982 that can be found in very good condition in circulation. The 70-S (fingerprint) and 74-S are business strikes.
Proofs have a mirror surface. None of your coins do. Polished coins have a mirror surface also but the polishing smooths out the details and usually leaves an area next to the relief where the polish did not reach.
And @physics-fan3.14 can tell you all about those business strikes designated as proof-like, so in future you can distinguish those as well
Not in 1970 or 1974, they didn't. (The 1970-S and 1974-S in these photos still aren't proof, though.)
Not talking about commemoratives, I was just on circulating coinage but thank you. There was a time when it was common for 50 cent commemoratives to circulate. But you know what I mean.