The F in "JFK" stands for Fitzgerald.
JFK
Did the Mob Kill JFK - 2009 TV was released on: USA: 22 November 2009
Infamous - 2003 JFK Jr- 2-1 was released on: USA: 2004
The Doctors - 2008 JFK Assassination 60-69 was released on: USA: 22 November 2013
About $2.00 only for the silver.
You wouldn't get much more than the face value for it.
One cent. It's a novelty item made by stamping a picture of JFK onto a normal cent. Collectors consider it to be an altered or damaged coin.
i've been researching them. some are woeth 4 to 5 $, while rare one's go for 25 to 100$
The mint mark on a cent, if it has one, is always below the date. Private companies often stamp special symbols onto cents (e.g. JFK's picture, a logo, etc.) and sell them as novelties, so my guess is that is what you have. It has no numismatic value and is worth only face value.
This is a common US commemorative stamp. If you want to buy just one it will probably cost you from 10 to 25 cents at a stamp store. If you want to order it by mail, you would have to pay postage and handling in addition. Dealers get them as part of larger lots for almost nothing per stamp- say 65% face if mint and 1/2 cent if used. It is the kind of stamp I use on letters if unused or give to kids if used.
One cent. It's not a US Mint product. In the years following JFK's death a lot of companies took ordinary cents and used metal punches to stamp his image on the coins, then sell them as "commemoratives". In reality they're considered to be altered coins and novelty items with no added value to a coin collector.
It's just a half dollar. No business strike Kennedy is worth more than face value
his assassination shocked the world
Coin dealers buy coins.
50 cents.
One cent. It's not a US Mint product. In the years following JFK's death a lot of companies took ordinary cents and used metal punches to stamp his image on the coins, then sell them as "commemoratives". In reality they're considered to be altered coins and novelty items with no added value to a coin collector. If you have a normal Lincoln cent with a small picture of JFK on it, it's a novelty item made by punching his picture onto a genuine coin. The date was obviously chosen because that was the year of his assassination. Loads of these items were sold as keepsakes. If it's still attached to its original cardboard holder it might be worth a dollar or two, mostly for the holder and not the coin. If you got it in change it's considered to be an altered coin and has no extra value except as a curiosity.