Franklin D. Roosevelt first appeared on the US dime in 1946 and is still on it. Eisenhower has never been on a dime, only dollar coins starting in 1971 to the end of 1978. The value of the 1959 dime is about one dollar, just for the silver.
A 1951 Roosevelt dime is very common, most are only valued for the silver in them, about $1.35.
A proof coin has a retail value of about $1.00
The 1914 Barber dime is a common coin. Value is $4.00-$8.00 for most coins.
For the answer, visit: http://www.coinflation.com/coins/1946-1964-Silver-Roosevelt-Dime-Value.html
what is the value for an American 1909 silver dime
If it has any wear at all the value is for the silver only about $1.00. A uncirculated 1942 dime is about $2.50
Nothing. There is no such thing. The most silver any dime has is 90%. This is most likely what you have.
Franklin D. Roosevelt first appeared on the US dime in 1946 and is still on it. Eisenhower has never been on a dime, only dollar coins starting in 1971 to the end of 1978. The value of the 1959 dime is about one dollar, just for the silver.
A 1951 Roosevelt dime is very common, most are only valued for the silver in them, about $1.35.
With silver at $41.39 per ounce, as of 9-10-11 a 90% silver dime has a Melt Value of $3.99.
1902 and 1907 silver dimes
A proof coin has a retail value of about $1.00
The 1914 Barber dime is a common coin. Value is $4.00-$8.00 for most coins.
For the answer, visit: http://www.coinflation.com/coins/1946-1964-Silver-Roosevelt-Dime-Value.html
It is FDR on the dime, not Eisenhower. All Roosevelt dimes are common and only worth silver melt value. At the time of writing it is around $2.25 or so in silver.
If it is a circulated dime, then it is worth about $1.00, mostly depending on the value of silver