Unless you know how to grade your wheat cents ( pennies are from England) no site will help you. Most free sites are trying to sell you coins so the prices there are retail not what you would be given by a dealer. You could find a Coins or Coinage magazine and look them up there, but again you need to know their grade. You would get about 40% or so less than the magazine price.
2007-02-13 13:15:06
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answer #1
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answered by Taiping 7
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basically to mock Kain. they gained't bypass a bill or attempt to eliminate the penny. How does that make any CENTS(sense)? right here is your exchange sir' $2.23....we don't have pennies do you p.c. to around down? except the bypass a low that makes all expenditures flow up or down in increments of 5 cents. So issues would be a million.05, a million.10, a million.15, etc. no longer gonna ensue. Wheat pennies would be well worth a sprint and that's probable what that's being the 191<--- with or and not employing a quantity after it. Are the two stalks of wheat on the back one on the two sides? There you have it. Sorry it is not any longer well worth lots.
2016-10-02 02:36:10
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answer #2
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answered by empfield 4
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Taiping is right. You need to know how to grade your coins.
If you need an online free guide, then I suggest you go to this page here:
http://coins.about.com/library/coin_values/bl_wheat_cents.htm
The values on the page are approximately what a dealer will give you for average grade coins of the type typically found in old jars, shoe boxes, Whitman folders, dealer "unsorted lots," etc. For a start.
If you want to know the realistic prices of US coins that dealers will pay you, I recommend the Blue Book of U.S. Coin Values, which is the wholesale price guide that dealers use.
2007-02-13 13:54:02
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answer #3
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answered by silverpet 6
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im not sure i know my aunt likes to collect wheat pennies the reason im not sure
2007-02-15 03:57:50
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answer #4
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answered by donielle 7
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