The 1912-D Liberty Nickel is one of the more common dates in the series, but the mintmark on the back adds a lot to this coin's popularity. Collectors should have no problem finding a circulated example or even a nice Mint State example. According to the PCGS Population Report (as of June 2011), the most frequently-seen Mint State grade is MS-64, followed by MS-63. Gems are plentiful but become scarce in MS-66, with none graded higher. The most desirable examples are those with a full strike and choice, original color.
I AM A HISTORY TEACHER AND WE ARE STUDYING A NIGHT To Remember ABOUT The tragic sinking of the Titanic in April 1912 and other historic moments in that year . I WANTED MY STUDENTS TO hold and feel,something that was actually real from that era ..The actual coins from 1912 made everything palpable for them ? THANK YOU SO VERY MUCH
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Good dealer ! He ships vis parcel post. It takes a little longer, but less costly.
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This was a Christmas present, along with some other coins, to one of my grandsons to help him out with a nickel set. He really liked it.
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Great coin quality and price. Fast shipping!
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Started to assemble my collection and noticed that a v nickel had a mint mark and I needed one. A good filler coin
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The 1912-D Liberty nickel was the Denver Mint's first crack at coining the hard nickel alloy, with the result that most examples of this first branch mint issue are weakly struck on the corn ear to the left of the wreath bowknot, as well as on the obverse stars. Studying the history is evident here, knowing what to expect and why things are they way they are. I enjoy this aspect.
Nice condition for Pice paid. Would recommend to other buyers.
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just what i ordered
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Fine looking coin
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Good and exactly what I wanted.
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