1- Price: $500.01 - $2,500.00 | |
2- Certification Authority: PCGS | |
3- Denomination: Liberty V Nickel |
This 1886 Liberty V Nickel has great eye appeal with nice luster and nice strike. Looks MS65/64 but obverse has been lightly wiped. Certified: PCGS Choice BU Details
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$1,290.00 | $1,330.00 |
This original 1886 Liberty V Nickel has nice eye appeal with nice luster and strong strike. Great color and surfaces. Amazingly difficult to find in this grade. Certified: PCGS MS63
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$1,960.00 | $2,015.00 |
This wonderfully original 1886 Liberty V Nickel has superb eye appeal with fantastic luster and strong strike. Outstanding color and surfaces. Certified: PCGS PR65+
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$1,035.00 | $1,065.00 |
This wonderfully original 1886 Liberty V Nickel Proof has nice eye appeal with nice luster and strong strike. Great color and surfaces. Excellent value! Certified: PCGS PR65
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$805.00 | $830.00 |
This wonderfully original 1888 Liberty V Nickel has great eye appeal with fantastic luster and strong strike. Great color and surfaces. Tough to find this nice! Certified: PCGS MS64
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$545.00 | $560.00 |
This wonderfully original 1888 Liberty V Nickel has great eye appeal with fantastic luster and strong strike. Great color and surfaces. Tough to find! Certified: PCGS MS64
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$500.00 | $514.00 |
This original 1896 Liberty V Nickel has superb eye appeal with fantastic luster and strong strike. Outstanding color and surfaces. Certified: PCGS MS64
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$530.00 | $545.00 |
This wonderfully original 1905 Liberty V Nickel has great eye appeal with fantastic luster and nice strike. Blazing Gem. Tough to find this nice! Certified: PCGS MS66
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$725.00 | $750.00 |
When the U.S. nickel was first minted, it was actually worth three cents. It was President Andrew Jackson who approved a bill to authorize the coinage of five-cent pieces that took the place of five-cent fractional currency. Nickels were originally minted during the post-Civil War era when gold and silver were at a shortage. Nearly 30 million nickels were minted between 1867 and 1868 alone. Their practical denomination made them a welcome choice in a post-war economy, and their popularity continued to gain momentum through the turn of the century. The first true nickels were made primarily out of nickel blended with copper. Just as the nickel’s designs have changed, so too has their composition. Today’s silver-looking nickels are 75% copper, which has become an expensive metal to produce. In fact, it costs nearly 8 cents to make a nickel today.
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