Being gold plated removes its numismatic value. The coin is worth 50 cents and the plating less than one cent.
Their are real 1847 1 cent Hawaiian coins but this is not one of them. No gold 1 cent coins have ever been struck. It's likely a gold plated replica and has no collectible value.
The D after the 5 means dollars not cents, the US has never made a five cent gold coin. Take it to a coin dealer for an idea if value.
The first U.S. $1 gold coins were minted in 1849.
No. The US Mint did not issue any gold JFK 50 cent pieces.
Being gold plated removes its numismatic value. The coin is worth 50 cents and the plating less than one cent.
Their are real 1847 1 cent Hawaiian coins but this is not one of them. No gold 1 cent coins have ever been struck. It's likely a gold plated replica and has no collectible value.
Twenty-cent piece, Half-Dime, Three-cent piece, two-cent piece & the Half-cent.
No gold US one cent coins were ever made.
The D after the 5 means dollars not cents, the US has never made a five cent gold coin. Take it to a coin dealer for an idea if value.
24kgp means that the piece is 24 karat gold plated. A gold plated piece is worth much less than a piece that is 24 karat gold.
There are no such things as 1967 Canadian Olympic coins. Perhaps you are thinking of Centennial coins?
The first U.S. $1 gold coins were minted in 1849.
No. The US Mint did not issue any gold JFK 50 cent pieces.
it was worth $100m
There are way too many to list, but here are a few of the US denominations that are no longer being made for circulation today: 1/2 cent, 2 cent piece, 3 cent piece, half-dime (worth 5 cents but was small and made out of silver), 20 cent piece, silver dollar, gold $1 coin, gold quarter eagle ($2.50), gold half eagle ($5), gold eagle ($10), gold double eagle ($20), gold half-union ($50) Some of these coins are still being produced today as commemorative/bullion coins such as silver dollars and gold coins, but their collector value (and their metal value) far exceed face value.
it is worth 70.00