@delila1 …as said, if already in one of the Big 3, leave as is. The other thoughts I had was it may not be worth cracking and re-submitting. Ask...
A shot of the edge should tell, and there is a weight difference.
It was the Centennial, not the Bicentennial for Lincoln cents, first made in 1909, and, yes first year was 1938 for Jeffersons.
@Newbee03 …here’s another way to look at it: Starting with the known mintage of 1951-D Franklin Half Dollars, 9,475,200. The mint strikes coins...
Your lighting source appears to be at 2K{2 o’clock}. Move your source to 10K and try again. From what you have provided(so far), the glare is...
Provide us with a close-up of the bowtie without the glare…please.
The error is the imperfect die. The coins struck by the imperfect die are varieties. This is because multiple coins are usually struck by...
Wexler lists it as WDDR-003.
I agree they are die chips, very small premium, if any.
It would be better for you, as the OP, to post pictures of a normal coin, and also close-ups of the area in question from the found coin.
Definitely post-mint damage. Study the info at the site Sal posted to identify true mint errors. @SensibleSal66 Also, study the minting process...
Purty durn blurry but looks man-made PMD. Please post in-focus pictures.
Technically, we only have OPs word. We haven’t seen the obverse yet.
Not being argumentative, but it lists for a whopping ten cents in both G and VG @NGC…and being 82yo, looks like it fought some battles in WW2…nice...
@Markay …I don’t see any doubling from any of your pics. None of your coins appear to have been struck more than once. Hub doubling is not the...
A nice clear close-up of just the MM would help us all. I am leaning toward S.
Well, fellow members, I went to PCGS Photograde for Morgan Dollars. Based on the flattened hair above the ear, they show the closest match at...
Gotta go AU58.
Welcome to Coin Talk. If you get a Yeoman Red Book and read the section on Kennedy Half Dollars you will learn a lot and answer your own...
I don’t see anything out of the ordinary…looks like normal design features.
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