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How Much Is My 1944 Penny Worth? If it's a normal 1944, 1944-D, or 1944-S cent, it isn't worth much. They are some of the most common of common-date Wheat cents. Prices range from around 20 cents in circulated condition, to 35 cents in uncirculated.
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Read More »More than 2 billion wheat pennies were made in 1944, but that doesn’t mean that there aren’t important 1944 Lincoln cents that are worth a lot of money. In fact, the very valuable “twin” to the rare 1943 copper cent was born in 1944.
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Read More »Debates over whether shell casings were used to make Wheat cents in 1944 through 1946 have swirled in numismatic circles almost since the coins were released. Some consider the use of shell casings in the production of one-cent coins to be an urban myth, or a patriotic publicity stunt. Roger W. Burdette, perhaps the foremost numismatic historian of our era, discovered documentation in the National Archives confirming the use of shell casings to make Lincoln cents when researching his book United States Pattern and Experimental Pieces of WWII. These sources describe railroad hopper cars full of shell casings arriving at the Philadelphia Mint. Separately, I uncovered Congressional testimony that proves that shell casings were in fact used to make Lincoln cents from 1944 through 1946. In December 1943 testimony before a House Appropriations Subcommittee[1], Assistant Director of the Mint Leland Howard said “The War Production Board has granted us sufficient virgin copper and shell casings to resume production of a copperhued cent on January 1.” “When we start producing the bronze coins -- and incidentally we have already started, as far as the production of blanks and ingots are concerned -- we will have to take the virgin copper, shell casings, and zinc-alloy them, melt them and pour them, roll the ingots into strips, and then blank the strips out; and all that cost will be borne by this appropriation, and it will eat into it at a rapid rate. It is necessary to use virgin metal with the shell casings. Our equipment will not work shell casings as they are. That is a 70-30 alloy -- 70 percent copper and 30 percent zinc -- our equipment will not handle that.” “Shell casing” Wheat cents can sometimes display a brighter color than a normal bronze cent. Others can show streaks of color where minute traces of gunpowder primer in a shell made it through the cleaning process and into the alloy of a coin blank. These in particular are noted for their increased eye appeal.
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Read More »The reason there are so many 1944 steel cents from the Philadelphia Mint is that 25 million leftover 1943 zinc-coated one-cent steel blanks were used in 1944 to make an emergency issue of 2-Franc coins for liberated Belgium. This allowed for many more chances for a steel blank to find its way into the Wheat cent production line. 1944 Steel Cent Auction Records 1944 $180,000 (MS64) 1944-D $115,000 (MS63) 1944-S $408,000 (MS66)
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