Roosevelt dimes from 1965, 1966, and 1967 were minted in large numbers to replace the silver dimes minted up till 1964. They're still found in change and have no added value in circulated condition. Uncirculated ones are worth $1 - $2 each.
Note that there are no mint marks on US Coins with those dates.
All circulating dimes dated 1965 and later are made of copper-nickel and are only worth face value. The only circulating dimes that contain silver are dated 1964 and earlier.
No. All dimes minted since 1946 use the same design; the only difference is the mint mark. But from 1965 to 1967 the use of mint marks was temporarily discontinued while the Mints worked to strike new clad coins to replace the old silver ones, so 1966 dimes don't even have mint marks.
Your coin is worth face value only; hundreds of millions were minted. Note that the coin is simply a 1965 dime, not 1965-P. The P mint mark wasn't used on US dimes until 1980, and no US coins of any denomination had mint marks from 1965 to 1967.
There were no S-mint quarters struck from 1955 to 1967 inclusive and no US coins carried mint marks during the transition from silver to clad coinage in 1965-67.
All of the quarters struck for circulation from 1965 to date are just quarters.
They're worth about $2.50 a piece for the silver.
All circulating dimes dated 1965 and later are made of copper-nickel and are only worth face value. The only circulating dimes that contain silver are dated 1964 and earlier.
SIMPLE ANSWER: No US coin dated 1965, 1966 or 1967 will have a mintmark, it's just a penny.
No. All dimes minted since 1946 use the same design; the only difference is the mint mark. But from 1965 to 1967 the use of mint marks was temporarily discontinued while the Mints worked to strike new clad coins to replace the old silver ones, so 1966 dimes don't even have mint marks.
Your coin is worth face value only; hundreds of millions were minted. Note that the coin is simply a 1965 dime, not 1965-P. The P mint mark wasn't used on US dimes until 1980, and no US coins of any denomination had mint marks from 1965 to 1967.
There were no S-mint quarters struck from 1955 to 1967 inclusive and no US coins carried mint marks during the transition from silver to clad coinage in 1965-67.
Promise Her Anything - 1965 was released on: UK: November 1965 USA: 22 February 1966 Finland: 27 May 1966 Sweden: 13 June 1966 Mexico: 5 January 1967 Denmark: 4 December 1967
The cast of Supermarket Sweep - 1965 includes: Richard Hayes as Himself - Announcer (1966-1967) Wally King as Himself - Announcer (1965-1966) Bill Malone as Himself - Host (1965-1967) Johnny Olson as Himself - Sub-Announcer (1966) Gene Wood as Himself - Sub-Announcer (1966)
Rapture - 1965 was released on: USA: 23 August 1965 (New York City, New York) Sweden: 8 November 1965 West Germany: 11 March 1966 Australia: 17 March 1966 France: 7 May 1966 Finland: 26 August 1966 Mexico: 29 December 1966 Denmark: 15 March 1967 Argentina: 26 April 1967 Portugal: 12 May 1967
Bonanza was the highest rated show in 1965, 1966 and 1967.
It Happened Here - 1965 was released on: France: 17 May 1965 (Cannes Film Festival) UK: May 1966 USA: 8 August 1966 Sweden: 9 January 1967 Australia: 25 May 1967 Finland: 18 August 1967
Red Line 7000 - 1965 was released on: USA: 9 November 1965 UK: 11 November 1965 Sweden: 11 February 1966 West Germany: 18 March 1966 Finland: 8 April 1966 France: 24 June 1966 Denmark: 29 August 1966 Spain: 12 June 1967 (Madrid) Mexico: 6 July 1967