a letter or a marking that shows us in which city the coin was struck
a letter or letters indicating what specific Mint struck a coin
a letter that tells us where the coin was struck
a small letter (D and S being the most commonly encountered) somewhere on the coin
The "letter" denoting where the coin was minted. For example, D-Denver or S-San Francisco. No mint mark usually means Philadelphia.
A symbol used to identify the mint from which the coin originates.
a letter designation that identifies which U.S. Branch mint produced the coin. "P" or no mint mark -Philadelphia, "O" - New Orleans, "D" - Denver (1906 to present), "S" - San Francisco, "W" - West Point, "CC" - Carson City, "C" - Charlotte (gold only), "D" - Dahlonega ( 1838 to 1861) (gold only).
A letter or symbol indicating the mint of origin
a small letter on a coin identifying which of the United States Mint's facilities struck the coin.
letters and/or symbols indicating the place of mintage of a coin, and sometimes the workshop ( officina) responsible for the coins production.
A letter or symbol used to denote the mint which produced the coin.
A symbol identifying the particular mint which produced the coin.
a small letter on a coin that identifies the US Mint facility where the coin was struck
a small letter on a coin identifying which of the U.S. Mint's facilities struck the coin.
A sequence of letters or symbols that show which mint, and sometimes also which workshop, produced a coin. Often to be found in the exergue.
A symbol, usually a small letter, used to indicate at which mint a coin is struck.
a small letter on a coin that identifies which of the U.S. Mints the coin was produced at.
A mark added to a die to indicate the mint at which a coin was struck. Under the Romans this often included the individual workshop in a mint
A mint mark is an inscription on a coin indicating the mint where the coin was produced.