Yup, one cent.
Thinking the same thing, I am no error guy though.
What does the reverse look like?
Fake beyond a doubt. Typical souvenir type cast replica.
Normal cent, 1990 Philadelphia mint cents have no mint mark.
Read through this thread, it is all explained.
I am sure there are errors of every year, mintmark and denomination. With the number of coins being produced, mistakes will happen.
There is only one genuine coin known and thousands of replicas so the odds of it being real are beyond astronomical. If you read this thread, you...
Most likely five cents. Unless it is extremely high grade it would be worth just face value.
Can you tell us a little about your coin? A description, date, mintmark, denomination?
As stated, the coin you pictured in the slab is quite valuable, yours however is worth five cents. Condition is everything.
Every year has errors, you will need to be more specific. What error do you see on your coin?
No such thing as a no P proof. All proofs were minted in San Francisco. The difference between a proof and business strike are discussed in this...
It's really only worth face value, five cents. There is no reason to have it graded. Which I imagine they would just call it genuine,...
It is not a 1913, there are only five and they are all accounted for. Hard to tell what date it really is.
OK, it took some looking but I found the coin that information pertains too. That price was for a doubled die obverse coin in very high grade,...
Nope, there are only five. The Walton specimen was once thought lost in a car accident but it was later identified in the family's possession.
It is nice, but only worth fifty cents or so, so not worth grading.
That is definitely a copy. You can tell it is a cast copy by the mushy details and rough bubbly surfaces.
Yup, that one spent some time in the ground.
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