Liberty Head Nickel The message entitled Liberty Head Nickel posted by Chuck on 5/31/03 15:59 in the liberty nickels coin collecting value forum has now expired. Sorry for the inconvenience.
You are in: Virtual Public Library >> Hall of Coins and Currency >> LIBERTY HEAD NICKEL Girl Scouts 100th Year - Click Here LIBERTY HEAD NICKEL ...
Liberty Head Nickels 1883-1913 Coin Guide Liberty Head Nickels 1883-1913 ...
Liberty Head Nickel - Just Listed Three Liberty Head Nickels 1912 LIBERTY HEAD/V NICKEL VERY NICE "RARE" YOU GRADE ...
LOT OF (20) LIBERTY HEAD NICKELS 1901 - 1906 - NO RES. 1883 No Cent Nickel Nice High Grade ...
Category : Nickels / Shield & Liberty Head Nickels / Shield & Liberty Head Nickels * Chapter 2 ...
Liberty Head Nickels (1883-1913) In 1883 the Liberty Head nickel made its appearance. Designed by Charles E. Barber, the first pieces struck had the denomination on the reverse expressed simply by the Roman numeral V.
Liberty Head Nickel In 1883, a new 5-cent piece was struck with the female likeness of Liberty on the obverse and a "V" (Roman numeral 5) on the reverse. What was missing was the word "cents.
Liberty Head nickels struck in 1883 without a denomination. The lack of a denomination was very confusing to the public and led to the "racketeer" nickel scandal. Also see: Racketeer nickel No-grade ...
1913 Liberty Head Nickel The featured coins in these exhibits are some of the most famous rare coins of the United States of America.
The Liberty Head Nickel, when first minted in 1883, did not have the word "cents" inscribed on it. Enterprising individuals illegally gold plated the coins and attempted to pass them off as $5 gold pieces, often successfully. The U.S.
The 1913 Liberty Head Nickel - The Most Hyped Coin in History The 1933 Saint-Gaudens Gold Double Eagle - World's Most Valuable Coin The Curious Story Behind the 1895 Morgan Dollar Related Articles ...
9. I have a Liberty Head nickel that is older than the 1913 Liberty Head nickel. Is it worth more?
Main article: Liberty Head nickel V nickel with and without "cents" Liberty Head ("V") Nickels were officially minted from 1883 to 1912. However, an unknown mint official illegally produced an unknown quantity of "V" Nickels with the date 1913.
i have a 1905 liberty head nickel and a 1936 buffalo head nickel . i need to know how much these are worth . thanks! ...
No 'CENTS' nickel Liberty Head nickels struck in 1883 without a denomination. The lack of a denomination was very confusing to the public and led to the 'racketeer' nickel scandal.
Treasure Hunting Liberty Head Nickels/Flynn & Van Note Items per page: Categories ...
Green, who began collecting coins in the World War I era, and who at one time owned all five known 1913 Liberty Head nickels (and, well-known in the philatelic field, all 100 of the known 1918 24¢ inverted air mail stamps), ...
1913 Liberty Head Nickel 1927-D Double Eagle 1786 Immunis Columbia Pattern - Maris 3-C 1999 Cent/Dime Mule New York 50 States Quarter™ 1792 Washington / Large Eagle with Stars "Pattern" in Copper 1881 Pattern Three Cents 1787 Massachusetts One Cent ...
Following all the drama surrounding its introduction, the Liberty Head nickel settled down to a sedate existence and one more befitting its role as a coin of the realm in the late Victorian era.
The 1913 Liberty Head Nickels have to be the most notorious of all surreptitious coins to have ever left a mint facility. Evidence suggests that they were intentionally struck by a former mint employee, seeking to profit from their sale.
His exhibit consisted of a 1913 Liberty Head nickel (only five in existence), an 1877-CC 20 cent piece (only twelve known), an 1836 pattern Liberty Cap gold dollar with rays, a 1915 Lincoln cent struck on a gold planchet, ...
1914-D Lincoln cent 1922 Lincoln cent 1943 bronze Lincoln cent 1912-S Liberty Head nickel 1913 Liberty Head nickel (a million dollar rarity) 1937-D three-legged Buffalo nickel 1944 copper-nickel Jefferson nickel 1799 Bust dollar ...
Max Mehl or Fort Worth, TX, advertised to pay $50 a piece for a 1913 Liberty Head Nickel. He knew he would never get one though.
Other rarities are the very popular and rare 1913 Liberty head nickel as well as all three types of the 1804 dollar, and two of three known examples of the world's most valuable coin, the 1933 double eagle, the third of which recently sold for 7.
The rendition of Miss Liberty where her hair is tied with a band, usually on the forehead. Liberty head nickels of 1883-1913 are an example. Fine weight ...
In 1883 the shield nickel was replaced by a nickel with a representation of Liberty on the dated side and a Roman numeral "5" on the reverse (See 1883 Racketeer Nickel). The Liberty Head nickel was made until 1912.
What DOES appear on the Shield nickel, unlike the subsequent Liberty Head nickels and Buffalo nickels, is the motto, 'In God We Trust'. That motto would return again to our nickel five-cent coin in 1938, with the introduction of the Jefferson nickel.
Chinese coins are a thousand years old normally sell for about ten dollars since there are so many of them; while a 1913 Liberty Head Nickel can sell for up to or over a million dollars because only five specimens are known to be in existence.
The 1804 Draped Bust dollars, the 1933 Saints, and the 1913 Liberty Head nickels are the most visible examples, with other examples including all 1852 proof denominations and the 1884 and 1885 Trade dollars.
See also: Liberty, Liberty Head, Nickel, Coin, Dollar
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