Hannes Tulving . . . . . . okay, bad joke.
Very nice! . . . Don't stop.
Your coin is in rough enough shape that, regardless of which mint it was made in, it is only worth its weight in silver . . . about $1.20.
No question that it's a fake. The coin is not crisp anywhere, lettering is too plump, luster looks all wrong . . .
MS64 BN
?Any one know what it's worth? I think you'll be lucky if someone accepts it as twenty five cents.
$127 trillion if I remember right, and the interest alone would likely amount to about $15k annually for every working age American.
Actually, the increase in debt this coming decade was already projected to be quite large as, collectively, this nation is unwilling to suck it up...
3.81% actually . . . Most coin dealers are not set up to work on nearly that sort of margin. That is almost exclusively the province of the top...
The value can vary quite a bit, depending on whether it is a proof or business strike, and then upon the grade . . . probably anywhere from $300...
No, the Lincoln(s) are not matte proofs.
I would expect it to grade well, based on what I can see . . .
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