Penny (U.S. coin) Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
| Cent (United States) | |
| Value: | 1 cent ($0.01 U.S. dollars) |
| Mass: | 2.5 g |
| Diameter: | 19.05 mm |
| Thickness: | 1.55 mm |
| Edge: | plain |
| Composition: | Copper-plated Zinc 97.5% Zn, 2.5% Cu |
| Obverse | |
| Design: | Abraham Lincoln |
| Designer: | V.D. Brenner |
| Design Date: | 1909 |
| Reverse | |
| Design: | Lincoln Memorial |
| Designer: | Frank Gasparro |
| Design Date: | 1959 |
Despite the prevalence of the common term "penny," the U.S. Mint has never actually minted a coin for which this is the official name.
| Table of contents |
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2 Designs 3 External link |
| 1982-present | 97.5% zinc, 2.5% copper |
| 1962-1981 | 95% copper, 5% zinc |
| 1944-1961 | bronze (95% copper, 5% zinc and tin) |
| 1943 | zinc-plated steel |
| 1864-1942 | bronze |
| 1857-1863 | 88% copper, 12% nickel (a.k.a. NS-12) |
| 1837-1856 | bronze |
| 1793-1836 | copper |
The cent's composition was changed in 1982 because the value of the copper in the coin started to rise above one cent. In 1943, at the peak of World War II, pennies of zinc-plated steel were made for a short time due to war demands for copper; a few (the U.S. Mint reports forty) copper cents from 1943 were produced. Following that year, salvaged ammunition shells made their way into the minting process, and it was not uncommon to see coins featuring streaks of brass or having a considerably darker finish than other issues.
In 1974, a few test cents were struck in aluminum, but were never released for circulation.
The following types of cents have been produced:
Designs
The cent has gone through several designs over its two-hundred year history. Until 1857 it was about the size of the current half-dollar coin.
Throughout its history, the Lincoln cent has featured several fonts for the date, but most of the digits have been old-style numerals, except with the "4" and "8" neither ascending nor descending. The only significant divergence is that the "3" was non-descending (the same size as a "0", "1", or "2") in the early history, before switching to descending for one year in 1934 and then permanently (as of 2004) in 1943.
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