I would keep it, although I am told these impaired proofs are usually only face value. There's no real market for modern Jeffersons.
Someone wrapped up their 87's and brought it into the bank when they realized it's only worth face value.
The scratch kills it. And the graininess looks like a result of harsh cleaning.
The pennies I have been spending in the coin acceptor at the grocery. Although I hold back an equivalent cash amount. Just too many to save. Held...
I stopped off to get some fruit, quarter on the ground where I parked the car. Not pictured as I was off the clock. 11 jars of 400 quarters each....
Damaged, damaged, and damaged. Errors come from the mint. Damage comes after.
No.
Some appear to be culls.
I believe the 1950 has a slight value over face even in circulated condition.
You may be able to see the date without doing anything. You get a super bright light. (I use my bathroom heat lamp 3 250 bulbs). Then you use a...
The S and D mints in uncirc are worth a bit more than the Philly. But, on the coin shown, we don't see the reverse. You get a lot of scrug with...
Since it doesn't appear to be on a mound (1913), or have a mint mark. (Often the early mint mark dates can be valuable.) There's not a lot of risk...
Discovery coin. That's YUGE. Good job.
Why are people selling silver below melt? Considering silver is very low right now.
They are NIFC, and low mintage. But there's really no market for them currently. A Kennedy collector might need them to fill holes and doesn't...
Photo the edge, and post the weight. It could be a blank quarter, which has good value. Or maybe not.
Most likely environmental damage. If that coin was in the ground, and recovered (metal detector). The soil, air, water, chemicals react with the...
Can't see the reverse, but this is at most a 25 cent coin. Grading is very expensive.
Agree with post #5 53 and 45 First one, reverse a little nicer than obv. Second one shows enough wear for the 45.
All of the 43, 44 and 45's are silver. (Large MM over dome.) 42 made both kinds, 42, and 42-D regular, 42-P and 42-S silver (large MM).
Separate names with a comma.