The listing, 1911 Liberty "V" Nickel- 103 Years Old!!! has ended.
Here is a good-fine condition V nickel.Blackened a little with age.Worth $1.75- $4 or more ungraded.These V nickles that I list may not be the exact coin the winner gets.I have several of the same year.Good luck!
Due to their low relief, Liberty Head nickels are generally available well struck; the lower-left portion of the wreath may be a bit soft, due to its being directly opposite the highest relief of Liberty’s bust. Made in large numbers, these coins are readily available in very high grades. Points to check for wear are the hair above Liberty’s ear and the wreath and corn ears on the reverse.
In 1913 the Liberty Head design gave way to the Indian Head/Buffalo type. No Liberty nickels were made of that date officially, but some years later collectors were stunned to learn that five 1913 examples had surfaced—all of them apparently made on the sly by someone at the Philadelphia Mint. Despite their clouded origins, these came to be accepted as legitimate collectibles, and they now rank among the most coveted and valuable of all U.S. coins. In 1996 the Eliasberg Specimen, considered the finest of the five, became the first United States coin to top one million dollars at auction.