September 3, 2009 The 1943 Lincoln cent was produced at 3 US Mint facilities; Philadelphia which is shown here as 1944-P, Denver which is shown here as 1944-D and San Francisco which is shown here as 1944-S. To determine which coin you have it is necessary to locate the mint mark. This mark is a small letter and is located just below the date. The letter "D" is for Denver. The letter "S" is for San Francisco. If there is no letter the coin was minted in Philadelphia. The circulated and uncirculated values of these coins are shown in the following list: Circulated Grades............1943-P............1943-D.............1943-S G4....................................$0.06................$0.07...............$0.08 F12...................................$0.17................$0.24...............$0.32 VF30.................................$0.30................$0.45...............$0.55 EF40.................................$0.35................$0.55...............$0.63 AU55.................................$0.75................$0.92...............$1.44 Uncirculated GradesMS60.................................$1.04................$1.44...............$3.45 MS62.................................$1.73.................$2.01..............$5.18 MS64.................................$14.95...............$13.80.............$17.83 MS65.................................$20.....................$21.................$22
A US steel Lincoln cent is 5 to 10 cents in average condition.
The 1943 steel Lincoln cent is not rare or scarce, the average value is 5 to 10 cents.
A genuine copper (bronze actually) 1943 Philadelphia issue Lincoln cent has a minimum value of $60,000.00.
It's a Lincoln Head cent not a liberty cent. 1943-S steel cents are valued at 5 to 10 cents on average. Uncirculated examples can be $5.00-$20.00
The 1943 Lincoln cents were struck in zinc coated steel not silver. Original surface coins are 10 to 25 cents on average.
A US steel Lincoln cent is 5 to 10 cents in average condition.
The 1943 steel Lincoln cent is not rare or scarce, the average value is 5 to 10 cents.
The earliest Lincoln cent is 1909. There is no such thing as a 1907 Lincoln cent.
1943 Lincoln cents are zinc-coated steel.
A genuine copper (bronze actually) 1943 Philadelphia issue Lincoln cent has a minimum value of $60,000.00.
It's a Lincoln Head cent not a liberty cent. 1943-S steel cents are valued at 5 to 10 cents on average. Uncirculated examples can be $5.00-$20.00
The 1943-S steel Lincoln cent is common. Average value is 10 to 25 cents.
The 1943 Lincoln cents were struck in zinc coated steel not silver. Original surface coins are 10 to 25 cents on average.
The 1943-S steel Lincoln cent is common. Average value is 10 to 25 cents.
The 1990 Lincoln Cent in circulated conditions has a value of one cent. In uncirculated conditions it has a value of about $1 at MS-65 and as much as $2,700 in MS-69.
The face value is 1 cent.
One cent