This wonderfully original 1849 Large Cent has great eye appeal and strong strike. Outstanding chocolate brown color and surfaces. Certified: ANACS AU55
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$157.00 | $161.00 |
This original 1857 Flying Eagle Cent has great eye appeal and nice strike. Great color and surfaces. Certified: ANACS VF30
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$84.00 | $86.00 |
This 1858 Flying Eagle Cent has nice eye appeal and nice strike. I don't think it has AU details but I don't think it's been cleaned either. Certified: ANACS AU Details
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$157.00 | $161.00 |
This wonderfully original 1858 Flying Eagle Cent has superb eye appeal and strong strike. Outstanding color and surfaces. Closer to MS60 than AU55. Certified: ANACS AU55
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$391.00 | $402.00 |
This original 1864 Copper-Nickel Indian Cent has nice eye appeal and nice strike. Great color and surfaces. Certified: ANACS AU58
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$157.00 | $161.00 |
This original 1886 Ty 1 Indian Cent has great eye appeal and nice strike. Nice color and surfaces. Certified: ANACS VF25
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$73.00 | $75.00 |
This original 1908-S Indian Cent has nice eye appeal and nice strike. Great chocolate brown color and surfaces. Certified: ANACS VF25
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$115.00 | $118.00 |
This original 1911 Lincoln Cent has nice eye appeal with nice luster and strong strike. Color and surfaces a touch off. Matte Proof Lincoln's are undervalued. Certified: ANACS PF62 BRN
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$540.00 | $555.00 |
This 1922-D Lincoln Cent Weak D Die 3 has decent eye appeal and average strike. Good hole filler! No trade of 'D' remains. Certified: ANACS F12
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$157.00 | $161.00 |
The U.S. cent, or penny, was one of the first coins struck by the U.S. mint in 1793. At that time, pennies were much larger than today’s modern cent coins. These “Large Cents” were made of copper and measured nearly the size of a half-dollar in diameter. Smaller one-cent coins entered into America’s economy in 1856 during the pre-Civil War era with the production of Flying Eagle pennies from 1856 to 1858, followed by Indian Head pennies from 1859 to 1909. The Lincoln penny was first struck in 1909 and originally featured the iconic Wheat Penny design with two sheaves of wheat on its reverse side. In 1959, the wheat design of the Lincoln penny was replaced with a depiction of the Lincoln Memorial.
How much are old pennies worth? Contact our expert numismatists at 1-800-965-2646.