US Coins with no mint mark were minted at the US Mint's main facility in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
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A mint mark is a smaller letter or letters representing the mint facility the coin was struck and are found in various places on the coin.
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I'm assuming you mean the mint-mark? The mint-mark shows which branch of the US mint created the coins, if there is a P mark (or no mintmark on some coins) the coin was minted in Philadelphia, a D mark signifies Denver, an S mark shows the coin was from San Fransisco and a W mark is from the West Point Mint.
The mint is the facility where it was made, so I assume you're referring to the mint MARK, which is the letter that indicates the facility. The mint mark position on a 1909 Indian head cent is on the back under the wreath. On a Lincoln cent, it's under the date. Most 1909 cents were made in Philadelphia so they don't have mint marks. Only a relatively small number were in San Francisco, and they carry an S mint mark.
The rock is usually referred to as a tombstone or headstone when it marks a person's grave. It typically displays the individual's name, dates of birth and death, and sometimes a message or epitaph.
You can mark it any way you wish. It'll actually go to principle only after you've satisfied the outstanding interest as of the date it's recieved.
1902 makes it a Barber dime, so the mint mark is on the reverse (tails) side, right at the bottom. No mark indicates Philadelphia, S is San Francisco, and O is New Orleans. There isn't a Denver version, because that facility wasn't open yet.
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