, with the S mintmark of the San Francisco mint. With the exception of a brief period in 1838 and 1839, all coins minted at U.S. branch mints prior to 1908 displayed that branch's
mintmark on their
reverse. Larger denominations of gold and silver coins were labeled with the Dahlonega, Charlotte, and New Orleans mintmarks (D, C, and O, respectively) on the obverse (front) side, just above the dates, in those two years.
Carson City, which served as a U.S. branch mint from 1870 to 1893, produced coins with a CC mintmark. The
Manila Mint (the only overseas U.S. mint, which produced U.S. Territorial and U.S. Commonwealth coinage) used the M mintmark from 1920 to 1941. Between 1965 and 1967, as the Mint labored to replace the silver coinage with base metal coins, mintmarks were temporarily dispensed with (including on the penny and nickel) in order to discourage the hoarding of coins by
numismatists. Mintmarks were moved to the obverse of the nickel, dime, quarter, and half dollar in 1968, and have appeared on the obverse of the dollar coin since its re-introduction in 1971. •
Penny: Unlike all other coins, which had their mintmarks on the reverse until 1964, the
Lincoln cent has always had its mintmark on the obverse below the date to the right of Lincoln's bust since its 1909 introduction. •
Nickel: The mintmark was located near the rim of the obverse side, clockwise from the date from 1968 to 2005, to the right of
Thomas Jefferson's bust. The redesigned obverse of the nickel which appeared starting in 2006 has its mintmark below the date on the lower right. Many earlier nickels from 1938 to 1964 are still in circulation, and their mintmarks can be found on the reverse to the right of
Monticello, with the exception of the 1942–1945 war nickels appearing above Monticello. •
Dime: The mintmark is above the date on the obverse side to the right of
Franklin D. Roosevelt's bust. •
Quarter dollar: The mintmark is to the right of
George Washington's bust. •
Half dollar: The mintmark is below the center of
John F. Kennedy's bust, above the date. •
Eisenhower Dollar (1971–1978): The mintmark is below the center of
Dwight D. Eisenhower's bust, above the date. •
Susan B. Anthony dollar (1979–1981, 1999): The mintmark is found to the left of
Susan B. Anthony's bust. •
Sacagawea dollar (2000–present): For coins minted from 2000 to 2008, the mintmark is just below the date. For coins minted since 2009, the date, mintmark and
E Pluribus Unum were moved to the edge of the coin. •
Presidential dollar (2007–2016, 2020): The mintmark and date are found on the edge of the coin. •
American Innovation dollar (2018–2032): The mintmark and date are found on the edge of the coin. Due to a shortage of
nickel during
World War II, the composition of the five-cent coin was changed to include
silver. To mark this change, nickels minted in Philadelphia (which had featured no mintmarks until then) displayed a P in the field above the dome of
Monticello. Nickels from San Francisco were minted in the same fashion, and Denver nickels reflected the change in 1943. This new mintmark location continued until 1946 when the nickel returned to its pre-war composition. The P mintmark, discontinued after the war, reappeared in 1979 on the Anthony dollar. By 1982, it had appeared on every other regular-issue coin except the cent, which, with the exception of 2017 Lincoln Cents, still bears no P mintmark. The circulating cents struck in the 1980s at San Francisco (except proofs) and West Point also bears no mintmark, as their facilities were used to supplement Philadelphia's production. Given the limited numbers produced at each facility, they might have been hoarded as collectibles. For 2017, in commemoration of the U.S. Mint's 225th Anniversary, the P mintmark was placed on the obverse of Philadelphia-minted Lincoln cents for the first time in the coin's 100+ year history. The P mintmark did not re-appear for 2018 and subsequent circulation strikes minted in Philadelphia. == See also ==