Yours is definitely not a 66. Check out all the dings and scratches on Roosevelt's face. Still a nice collectable coin though that you should be...
Unfortunately you are correct.
It is a 32-T,a rarity 2 variety. Nice coin, even if it is a little beat up!
At that early year musket balls and trade beads would be much more common currency than any coinage. The New England coinage would not come about...
You just beat me!
Did you read this thread? It explains everything.
It is nicer than the average 64 D nickel. Not high enough grade to be worth any premium over face value, but nice enough to put in a holder if...
I do too, if it is something I can help with. Just as I know others would help me with my weak areas. I specifically did not mention what the...
True. Not so much surprised, it just kind of bugged me. I sometimes wonder when coin "collecting" went from searching out coins for your...
No, I don't. I had it on my watch list but must have cleared it.
Like most people here, I have a decent general knowledge of coins but pretty darn good in my narrow collecting focus. I also have over a thousand...
Yes, kind of hard to see one piece at a time!
As stated normal wartime nickel with probable lamination issue on reverse.
Could be a little rust imbedded in it or something then making it slightly magnetic, it is definitely a normal copper cent though.
Normal 1968 dime. Maybe not as worn as some but definitely normal.
Clearly just normal copper. Corroded enough to lose a little weight.
Lately, Connecticut coppers and the Hibernia and Rosa Americana coinage. I do tend to jump around a bit sometimes though.
The 2 coins "in question" aren't just cleaned, they are scrubbed. The two that you call cleaned still show some toning. Ring and color are not...
It is still worth 25 cents, but probably wouldn't work in any kind of machine because of the damage.
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