enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Nickel | U.S. Mint - United States Mint

    www.usmint.gov/.../circulating-coins/nickel

    The image of Monticello on the reverse (tails) is a more detailed depiction of the design used from 1938 to 2003. The first five-cent coin made by the U.S. Mint was silver, not nickel. This silver five-cent coin was called a “half disme” (pronounced “dime”) and was much smaller than today’s nickel. The designs from 1794 to 1837 ...

  3. Circulating Coins | U.S. Mint - United States Mint

    www.usmint.gov/learn/coin-and-medal-programs/circulating-coins

    Circulating coins are the coins that the United States Mint produces for everyday transactions. Circulating coins are also included in the United States Mint’s annual coin sets, which are the staple of coin collecting. Find measurements and metal content information on the Coin Specifications table. Watch the video below to see how the Mint ...

  4. Coin Specifications | U.S. Mint - United States Mint

    www.usmint.gov/learn/coin-and-medal-programs/coin...

    Specifications for the American Innovation $1 Coins and Native American $1 Coins are the same. The penny, dime, quarter, half dollar, and dollar are clad coins. Clad coins have an inner core of metal surrounded by an outer layer of a different metal. The Mint makes clad coins with an inner core of copper. The nickel is the only circulating coin ...

  5. Westward Journey Nickel Series | U.S. Mint - United States Mint

    www.usmint.gov/.../westward-journey-nickel-series

    The series was authorized by Public Law 108-15. The U.S. Mint began the Westward Journey Nickel Series in 2004 with the release of the “Peace Medal” and “Keelboat” nickels. In 2005, a new likeness of Thomas Jefferson appeared on the obverse in recognition of his role in the Louisiana Purchase and commissioning the Lewis and Clark ...

  6. Nickel | U.S. Mint for Kids - United States Mint

    www.usmint.gov/learn/kids/about-the-mint/nickel

    The first five-cent coins were made of silver, not nickel. In the Mint’s early days, all coins had to be made of either gold, silver, or copper. The first five-cent coin in 1794 was called a half dime. It was much smaller than today’s nickel. The five-cent coin we call the nickel was created in 1866…but the Mint kept making the silver ...

  7. Return to Monticello Nickel | U.S. Mint - United States Mint

    www.usmint.gov/coins/coin-medal-programs/circulating-coins/...

    Background. The U.S. Mint first issued the Return to Monticello Nickel in 2006, following the end of the Westward Journey Nickel Series. The “Jefferson, 1800” obverse design features, for the first time in history, a forward-looking portrait of Thomas Jefferson. The image is based on the first Rembrandt Peale life study of Jefferson, done ...

  8. What Coins Are Made Of | U.S. Mint for Kids - United States Mint

    www.usmint.gov/learn/kids/coins-life/coin-composition

    Today’s coins are made from metals such as nickel, copper, and zinc. Instead of using one metal to make a coin, multiple kinds of metal are pressed together into layers. This is called a “clad” coin. The layers of a clad coin are like a sandwich. The quarter and dime have a layer of copper inside layers of a nickel-copper mix.

  9. Circulating Coins | Image Library | U.S. Mint

    www.usmint.gov/news/image-library/circulating

    Image Library. Download high-resolution images of circulating coins for use in publications. Read the Mint’s design use policies and other information regarding the use of these images. For more information about the coins, visit the Circulating Coins page. Email inquiries@usmint.treas.gov to request images from previous years.

  10. The History of U.S. Circulating Coins - United States Mint

    www.usmint.gov/learn/history/us-circulating-coin

    The Buffalo nickel was one of the first coins to deviate from the traditional eagle or wreath designs by featuring an American bison on the reverse. Since then, Congress sometimes authorizes new reverse designs to commemorate certain events or places, such as the Lincoln Bicentennial One Cent Program , the Westward Journey Nickel Series ...

  11. American Bison Nickel | U.S. Mint - United States Mint

    www.usmint.gov/coins/coin-medal-programs/westward-journey...

    In 2004 and 2005, the U.S. Mint commemorated the bicentennials of the Louisiana Purchase and the Lewis and Clark expedition with the Westward Journey Nickel Series. The American Bison Nickel is the third of four coins in the series. The obverse design, for the first time in 67 years, shows a new likeness of America’s third president, Thomas ...