The letter "D" found beneath the date of the penny indicates the coin was minted in Denver, Colorado.
In uncirculated condition, it could go for 25 cents. It's an extremely common date.
It means that the coin was made at the Denver mint.
The "D" indicates the coin was minted in the Denver mint
The Lincoln Penny was produced in both Philadelphia and Denver in 1956 (the latter have a "D" mintmark below the date).
It would depend on the date of the coin. Ask a new question and include the date.
It depends on the date of the uncirculated D penny. Post new question with the correct date.
The letter "D" found beneath the date of the penny indicates the coin was minted in Denver, Colorado.
In uncirculated condition, it could go for 25 cents. It's an extremely common date.
It means that the coin was made at the Denver mint.
Circulated 1960 small dates from the Denver mint are worth about $0.25.
The "D" indicates the coin was minted in the Denver mint
The Lincoln Penny was produced in both Philadelphia and Denver in 1956 (the latter have a "D" mintmark below the date).
Denver minted wheat cents from 1910 to 1958. Please post a new, separate question with the coin's date.
It's not a penny. Remember, there was no Colorado no Denver and no such mint in that year. Denver was founded in 1858. What you have is a mint token struck on a penny-sized blank. These are included in the uncirculated coin sets issued each year, one for Denver and one for Philadelphia. 1789 is the year that the Treasury Department was established, not the date the token was made. Sometimes people break up the sets and the tokens slip into circulation because they look like pennies. However, they aren't collectible because they don't have a mintage year on them and they all look alike.
It's not a penny. Remember, there was no Colorado no Denver and no such mint in that year. Denver was founded in 1858. What you have is a mint token struck on a penny-sized blank. These are included in the uncirculated coin sets issued each year, one for Denver and one for Philadelphia. 1789 is the year that the Treasury Department was established, not the date the token was made. Sometimes people break up the sets and the tokens slip into circulation because they look like pennies. However, they aren't collectible because they don't have a mintage year on them and they all look alike.
On a Lincoln penny, the mint mark ("S" for San Francisco, "D" for Denver) would be located just below the date.