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Plain Whitman coin folders for common U.S. coin denominations - Penny ( 19 mm ), Nickel ( 21 mm ), Dime ( 17.9 mm ), Quarter ( 24.3 mm ), Half Dollar ( 30.6 mm ) and Large Dollars ( 38.1 mm ). These...
Plain Whitman coin folders for common U.S. coin denominations - Penny ( 19 mm ), Nickel ( 21 mm ), Dime ( 17.9 mm ), Quarter ( 24.3 mm ), Half Dollar ( 30.6 mm ) and Large Dollars ( 38.1 mm ). These folders have no printed dates so you can collect coins any way that you would like.*Each folder is sold separately. Coin Folder Capacities Penny Folder - 90 pennies Nickel Folder - 65 nickels Dime Folder - 77 dimes Quarter Folder - 43 quarters Half Dollar Folder - 36 half dollars Silver Dollar...
Nickels of this design, often called " V nickels," were introduced in 1883. The first coins did not have the word CENTS on the back, and some were gold plated and fraudulently passed as $5 gold...
Nickels of this design, often called " V nickels," were introduced in 1883. The first coins did not have the word CENTS on the back, and some were gold plated and fraudulently passed as $5 gold pieces. Later that year the U.S. Mint added the word CENTS in its present location. All Liberty Head Nickels were struck at the Philadelphia Mint except for part of the coinage of 1912, when some coins were struck in Denver and San Francisco. The mintmarks D and S appear on the reverse, under the bullet...
James E. Fraser designed this coin, commonly known as the Buffalo Nickel. His initial "F" appears just below the date. The head does not represent any particular Native American, but is a composite...
James E. Fraser designed this coin, commonly known as the Buffalo Nickel. His initial "F" appears just below the date. The head does not represent any particular Native American, but is a composite of three defferent models. Although commonly referred to as Buffalo nickels, the animal on the reverse is actually a bison, likely modeled after "Black Diamond" in the New York Zoological Gardens. In its orginal form, the bison stands on a raised mound, into which the denomination was set. However,...
The original design of the Jefferson nickel is a modification of a model by sculptor Felix Schlag. It was chosen in a 1938 open competition and is the only instance of a regular coin design being so...
The original design of the Jefferson nickel is a modification of a model by sculptor Felix Schlag. It was chosen in a 1938 open competition and is the only instance of a regular coin design being so selected. The designer's initials FS were added below the bust in 1966. The reverse design depicts Jefferson's beautiful home, Monticello. This coin remained mostly unchanged through 2003." - Whitman PublishingComposition: 1938-1942, 1946 to date: 75% copper, 25% nickel; 1942-1945: 56% copper, 35%...