actually, they are like this: same age= different era Sonic has died in silver's era Silver doesn't exist in sonic's era I do hope this helps
Konan is a Philippine foll dance from Pangasinan. The name derived from an old Spanish-era silver coin, and the dance derived from a children's game.
It is an old French coin, from the 1940 to 1944 era.
Please indicate if the coin is of silver/copper or brass if possible provide photo which will allow me to evaluate the same contact me at r.ramdhan@yahoo.com
The 1943-S Walking Liberty half dollar is not has common as no mint mark coins of the same date but does not carry much additional value. Most coins of this era show heavy wear. With silver now so high ($35) as I write this, the coin's value is mostly from the silver content. As silver as increased in price, the numismatic value has been passed. Based on silver, most dealers would give you around $10.00 for it if in average condition. if cleaned/abused then less. If this was in Mint State, then much more.
You need to post the date and the mintmark, along with an estimate of the condition. There are many dollars dating from that era and the prices vary dramatically depending on the date and mintmark.
1942 is a year rather than an era; more information is needed. Please post a new question with more details, including the coin's denomination, condition, and whether it has a mint mark. Those details will help to ID your coin.
For automated coin changing I believe the first ones were the British sovereign coin changers. They first came out in the late Victorian/Edwardian era (I know for sure that one was patented by John Cox in or before 1907). These early machines would let you put in a gold sovereign or half sovereign and recieve change in smaller silver coins.
If it is silver it will have a hallmark stamped on it. A series of tiny images of an anchor, lion or something similar. A pair of letters etc. From this you can ascertain the age purity and where it was made
Fifteen dollars
1964 was the end of the silver era in circulating U.S. coinage. The price of silver had been fixed for decades but was allowed to float, and demand for the metal pushed the price to the point where dimes, quarters, and half dollars were worth much more than face value. People were withdrawing those denominations from circulation and selling them to dealers for their melt value, which caused a serious coin shortage. The government minted billions of cents and nickels* to help take off some of the strain, and started minting higher denomination coins out of copper-nickel clad metal instead of silver. Unfortunately someone in the government claimed that coin COLLECTORS rather than SPECULATORS were the primary culprits behind the silver-coin meltdown, so the Mint was ordered to remove mint marks from coins made during 1965, '66, and '67, which is why you won't see any mint marks for those years. (*)You'll also find lots of 1964 nickels still in circulation as well.
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