The name of the coin refers to the buffalo on its reverse side. It's unrelated to Buffalo Bill.
Uh, Buffalo Bill was a 19th-century frontiersman, sharpshooter, and entertainer. His nickname came from the animal pictured on the back of the buffalo nickel, but he has nothing to do with the coin.
The buffalo nickel with a penis made in 1913-1938, can be taken to 'most' banks and they will take the nickel, and hand you a $20 bill for every nickel you have that fits the criteria..ie: date, nickel, penis.
A Winchester buffalo bill comm.rifle or carbine are worth 595.00 dollars,if they are new in the original box and unfired.
The first two coins cannot exist, because buffalo nickels were minted from 1913 to 1938, but none were produced in 1932 or 1933 due to the Great Depression. For information about the silver certificate please see the Related Question.
That perticular bill sells for about 10 000$
A lot bcuz a dime or nickel was worth a lot back then
100-400 or so
The U.S. did not print any bills with that date.
A US or Canadian nickel is worth 5 cents. A five dollar bill is worth 500 cents. Thus a five dollar bill is equivalent to 100 nickels.
If you have the Buffalo Bill rifle,or Carbine model.The value will be 695 dollars for a rifle or Carbine that is new in the box(Unfired) and the box with it.If you have a Buffalo bill one of 300 presentation model,then th value will be 3,250 dollars for the same unfired(new in the box condition).
What was Buffalo Bill Cody's job?