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How much a silver high school ring is worth depends on the size, weight, and amount of silver in the ring.
If you hold your 1852 $1 gold piece, it would worth more than $100 today Inflation continues to drastically decrease the value of a dollar. What you could buy for dollar in 1852 would cost you $27.60, meaning that dollar would be worth about 4 cents in today's world.
Inflation continues to drastically decrease the value of a schilling. What you could buy for one schilling in 1843 would cost about 305 schillings today, meaning that schilling would be worth about 7/100 of its original value.
i wish i could get a straight answer for my question (is the amount of money spent on marketing worth it? yes/no and why?) for my school work.
He currently earns £6 million a year, as part of a 3 year contract with the BBC worth £18 million.
There is no silver in a 1964 nickel.
It depends if they are copper-nickel (post-1964) or 90% silver quarters (1964 and earlier). If they are copper-nickel, dated 1965 and earlier, they are only worth face, if they are silver, they are worth the silver content.
if it is silver it is Worth some money. but if it a penny or nickel it is a common date
Dimes dated 1964 are made of 90% silver and are worth about $1.35. Dimes dated 1965 are made of copper-nickel and are worth 10 cents.
The 1941 nickel doesn't contain any silver, and is worth maybe 10 cents.
If it's dated 1965-1970, it's 40% silver and currently worth about $5. 1971 or later is copper and nickel, worth 50 cents.
Most are worth about $1.00 just for the silver.
That's a silver war nickel from WWII, which contains 35% silver. It's worth about $2.
If it is a US dime, it isn't silver. Silver stopped being used in dimes after 1964, so any dime dated 1965 or later is struck in copper-nickel and are only worth face value.
There were no silver dollars issued by the US Mint in 1964.
The only nickels with silver in them were minted during WW2. All others are made of 75% copper and 25% nickel. A 1964 nickel is worth face value in circulated condition. Huge numbers of nickels were churned out in 1964 because higher-denomination silver coins were being withdrawn and melted. Nickels and pennies were the only coins that didn't have silver in them so they stayed in circulation. Their low value meant you'd get frequently get a fistful of change because nothing larger was available. Remember, a nickel weighs twice as much as a dime so if they'd both been made of silver back then, a nickel would have been worth as much as 2 dimes, which wouldn't have made a lot of "sense".
The only nickels with silver in them were minted during WW2. All others are made of 75% copper and 25% nickel. A 1964 nickel is worth face value in circulated condition. Huge numbers of nickels were churned out in 1964 because higher-denomination silver coins were being withdrawn and melted. Nickels and pennies were the only coins that didn't have silver in them so they stayed in circulation. Their low value meant you'd get frequently get a fistful of change because nothing larger was available. Remember, a nickel weighs twice as much as a dime so if they'd both been made of silver back then, a nickel would have been worth as much as 2 dimes, which wouldn't have made a lot of "sense".