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Description
The listing, Liberty "V" Nickel 1911 U.S. 5 Cent Coin has ended.
Offering a very old Liberty "V" Nickel 1911 - 102 years old! You will receive the exact coin shown in the pictures I have provided a high resolution scan so you can judge the coin’s condition yourself Free shipping in the USA! 2
I dont see the mint mark on Any of the coins. Can u see it on them ,all come with either s or d on them enless they came from Philly. Thats the only ones without. So thats alot not to have any. But i might now be able to see them from the listia app. Or do u know were these were mint from.
Oh that sounded wrong..... I didnt mean for it to sound like there was.anything wrong with these coins ,there great and im bidding on all i can. I just trip out cuz so many of THESE COINS NOT YOUR COINS these kind period... Have so many without the mint..but theres only one mint that didnt do it. I was wondering if u knew anything about it...thanks so much....just relized how different some stuff comes out on the comments when u mean it a whole different way.lol
Mint directors, in their annual reports, had long called for the authority to strike cents and nickels at all mints; by law they could then only be struck at Philadelphia. On April 24, 1906, this restriction was removed, although the first base metal coins, cents in both cases, were not struck at San Francisco until 1908 and Denver until 1911. In 1912, nickels were coined for the first time at each of the two branch mints.[25] The 1912-S (for San Francisco) nickel was not struck until Christmas Eve, and was only struck for four business days. A 1912-S nickel, one of the first forty coined, was used by former San Francisco Mayor James D. Phelan to pay the first fare on the city's first streetcar on December 28, 1912.[26] Excluding the 1913 nickel, the 1912-S, with only 238,000 struck, is by far the rarest in the series. (From Wikipedia)