This wonderfully original 1909-S VDB Lincoln Cent has great eye appeal and strong strike. Great chocolate brown color and surfaces. Certified: NGC AU53 BN
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$1,650.00 | $1,700.00 |
This original 1912-S Lincoln Cent has great eye appeal with nice luster and strong strike. Great color and surfaces. Seldom seen this nice. Certified: NGC MS65 RB
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$1,085.00 | $1,115.00 |
This wonderfully original 1929-S Lincoln Cent has superb eye appeal with fantastic luster and strong strike. Blazing Full Red Gem. Why R/B?? No idea. Certified: NGC MS65 RB
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$209.00 | $215.00 |
This original 1931-S Lincoln Cent has nice eye appeal and nice strike. Great chocolate brown color and surfaces. Grade: AU
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$105.00 | $108.00 |
This original 1931-S Lincoln Cent has nice eye appeal and nice strike. Nice chocolate brown color and surfaces. Grade: VF
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$84.00 | $86.00 |
This original 1931-S Lincoln Cent has nice eye appeal and nice strike. Nice chocolate brown color and surfaces. Grade: XF
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$89.00 | $91.00 |
The 100th anniversary of Abraham Lincoln’s birth was a celebration that ushered in a new styling of U.S. coins by using real portraits on the Lincoln penny. President Theodore Roosevelt commissioned sculptor Victor David Brenner to design the elements for the replacement coin of the long-running Indian Cent penny. There have been more Lincoln one-cent coins produced than any other denomination. Originally produced using 95% copper and 5% zinc, the Lincoln penny’s composition changed in response to the country’s defense needs during World War II with copper being a vital resource for the war effort. This resulted in the U.S. Mint producing a 99% steel penny with a thin layer of zinc in 1943. Modified alloys eventually gave way to today’s drastically different copper-plated zinc composition containing 97.6% zinc and 2.4% copper.
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