After 232 years, the United States Mint is retiring the penny. In a recent press release, the Mint announced that the last ...
To commemorate the occasion, the United States Mint has partnered with Stack’s Bowers Galleries to auction off 232 sets of ...
The U.S. Mint in Philadelphia is set to strike its last circulating penny on Wednesday as the president has canceled the ...
The US Mint has officially ended production of the penny after more than 230 years to save around $56 million annually. The ...
“While general production concludes today, the penny’s legacy lives on,” Kristie McNally, Acting Mint Director, said in the ...
Each of the 232 three-coin sets will likely fetch about $45,000-$50,000, estimates John Albanese, co-founder of rare coin authentication CAC Grading.
The production of pennies by the U.S. Mint is ending. That means change for stores and shoppers and cash transactions. Here's ...
The penny is officially dead. The United States Mint announced Wednesday that it has produced its last penny for circulation, ...
On Wednesday, Nov. 12, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and U.S. Treasurer Brandon Beach will mark the striking of the ...
A historic end to U.S. penny production as Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent strikes the final coin Wednesday. Rising costs ...
The U.S. government started making pennies in Philadelphia in 1792 when the city was the nation’s capital. It stopped Wednesday, as U.S. Treasurer Brandon Beach stepped up to a machine in the penny ...
U.S. Treasurer Brandon Beach visited the Philadelphia Mint on Wednesday to strike the final five circulating one-cent coins or pennies, ending 232 years of penny production in the United States.