1909 S Vdb
CoinTrackers.com has estimated the 1909 S Vdb Wheat Penny value at an average of $950, one in certified mint state (MS+) could be worth $2,200. (see details)...
The 1909-S VDB has been 'King of the Mountain' among Lincoln Cents for as long as anyone alive today can remember, and quite valuable. This was not always the case. In Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S. And Colonial Coins, he documents that one dealer, John Zug, purchased 25,000 of them directly from the San Francisco Mint. A few years later, Zug was selling them for 1.75 cents each. The 1909-S VDB ranks as one of the most popular and widely known of all the Lincoln cents and some might argue that it is one of the favorites in the entire run of United States coins. Collectors love coins with stories, and this one has a couple. First, there's the controversy over the initials on the reverse.
Type:Vdb Wheat Penny
Year:1909
Mint Mark: S
Face Value: 0.01 USD
Total Produced: 484,000 [?]
Silver Content: 0%
Numismatic Value: $950 to $2200.00
Value: As a rough estimate of this coins value you can assume this coin in average condition will be valued at somewhere around $950, while one in certified mint state (MS+) condition could bring as much as $2,200 at auction. This price does not reference any standard coin grading scale. So when we say average, we mean in a similar condition to other coins issued in 1909, and mint state meaning it is certified MS+ by one of the top coin grading companies. [?].
You need to know how to authentic 1909 S VDB Lincoln Cents before you buy them. You also need to know how much a 1909 S VDB penny is worth in all grades befo. 1909-S 1c VDB NGC MS64 Brown Lincoln Wheat Cent Uncirculated. Our price: $2,095.00 Sold.
Additional Info:
In 1909 there were V.D.B. and Non V.D.B. marked pennies. The VDB Wheat Pennies minted in San Francisco were the rarest of the rare. These coins are worth a nice house payment if you can find on in any condition :)1909 S Vdb Ms 66
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**When we say that 484,000, of these coins were produced or minted in 1909 this number doesn't always match the actual circulation count for this coin. The numbers come from the United States mint, and they don't reflect coins that have been melted, destroyed, or those that have never been released. Please keep that in mind.
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***Price subject to standard supply and demand laws, dealer premiums, and other market variations. Prices represent past values fetched at online auctions, estate sales, certified coins being sold by dealers, and user submitted values. While we wholeheartedly try to give honest price estimates there are many factors besides appearance, metal content, and rarity that help make up the coins overall value.Call or visit your local coin dealer for more information.
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1909 S Vdb Ms64
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1909 S Vdb Cent
1909 S Vdb Penny Value
The 1909-S Indian has a lower mintage than the 1909-S VDB cent, but for most grades sells for a lot less. This raises the question, why? Usually the coin with the lower mintage has higher market value, but not in this case.
The reasons come down to simple supply and demand.
In 1909, excitement over the new Lincoln cent created a frenzy of buying of the new coins. The short five-day period of 1909 VDB cents gobbled up all 26 million Philadelphia-minted cents. However, the much smaller San Francisco Mint issue was probably put into circulation despite its much lower mintage than its cousin issued later in the year (August 1909).
Thus the 1909-S Indian head cent was overlooked by hoarders and speculators as the new Lincoln cents were eagerly anticipated by the American public.
In the century since these two coins were released, the market value of the 1909-S Indian was often behind that of the 1909-S VDB cent — although in the 1920s, one could buy uncirculated 1909-S VDB cents for 25 cents each while 1909-S Indian cents in uncirculated condition sold for $1 and more.
By the time the first coin boards were printed in the 1930s, the empty space in most collections was the 1909-S VDB. Many fewer Indian head cent boards were made and sold, as there were far fewer collectors of that series at the time.
In fact, to date, the Lincoln cent is the most popular coin series with collectors as witnessed by the number of coin albums sold for the series by the major album makers, Dansco and Whitman.
I collected both series when I was in school in the 1930s and managed to find three of the 1909-S VDB cents and never found a 1909-S Indian head cent in change. But since I lived in Brooklyn, S-mint coins were uncommon in circulation.
I did know old-time collectors such as Bill Tracy, Charles Ruby and Ralph 'Curley' Mitchell who lived in California in the 1930s and 1940s and they found both coins in circulation in the early days.
My late friend Maurice M. Gould, who operated a coin business in Boston at that time, found none of the two coins in circulation but purchased many from collectors who either found them in change or bought them in 1909 when first released.
I visited the coin shop of the late Bob Johnson in San Francisco in 1963 when I was doing postgraduate work at nearby University of California, Berkeley, and he showed me a full roll of uncirculated 1909-S VDB cents he had recently purchased from a woman whose late husband bought them at a bank in 1909. He said he paid $1,000 for the roll. He also mentioned that he never bought a roll of 1909-S Indian head cents, although single coins showed up fairly often from customers who found them in change.
Over the decades, the aura of the 1909-S VDB cent has grown to the point where choice uncirculated coins are bringing over $10,000 at auction. Uncirculated 1909-S Indians still bring less, although actual population numbers are much lower.
In the July 2009 price list of California-based L&C Coins, one of the largest retailers of U.S. coins, the following were listed for sale:
Two 1909S Indian head cents, one graded PCGS VF-30 at $850 and one graded NGC VF-25 at $825. In the same price list were eleven 1909-S VDB cents ranging from a PCGS VF-20 for $1,500 to an NGC MS-65BN for $3,500. This illustrates that scarcity does not always equate to value. The mintage of the 1909-S Indian was 309,000, while the mintage of the 1909-S VDB Lincoln was 484,000.
There are numerous examples of rare coins bringing very different prices despite their small populations. A good example is the famed 1804 silver dollar; one recently sold for more than $2 million. There are 15 known specimens.
Going down the list of high-priced coins sold at auction, there are many coins that sold for less than half that amount even though only one or two specimens are known. This exemplifies the old economic axiom that supply and demand is the main pricing factor.