Coin Identifier
Lincoln Wheat Cent (Lincoln Wheat Penny) — obverse
Obverse
Lincoln Wheat Cent (Lincoln Wheat Penny) — reverse
Reverse
One Cent ($0.01)

Lincoln Wheat Cent (Lincoln Wheat Penny)

United States · 1936

A standard US one-cent coin featuring Abraham Lincoln on the obverse and two wheat stalks on the reverse.

Country
United States
Year
1936
Denomination
One Cent ($0.01)
Metal
Bronze (95% Copper, 5% Tin and Zinc)

This report is AI-generated and can be wrong. Always verify grade, authenticity, and value with a qualified dealer or certified grading service before buying, selling, or insuring.

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Overview

A standard US one-cent coin featuring Abraham Lincoln on the obverse and two wheat stalks on the reverse.

Historical significance

The Lincoln Cent was first issued in 1909 to commemorate the 100th anniversary of Abraham Lincoln's birth. It was the first US circulating coin to feature a person/President. The 1936 issue was struck during the Great Depression era.

Obverse (front)

Right-facing portrait of Abraham Lincoln, designed by Victor David Brenner. Legends: IN GOD WE TRUST, LIBERTY, and the date 1936.

Reverse (back)

Two stylized stalks of wheat flanking the words ONE CENT and UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. Latin motto E PLURIBUS UNUM at the top.

Estimated value

$0.15-$0.50 circulated, $5-$25 in MS-63+, $100+ for high-grade Red gems.

What drives this coin's value

The primary factors are condition (grade) and 'color' designation (Brown, Red-Brown, or Red). Key dates in the series like 1909-S VDB or 1914-D drive higher value, while 1936 is common.

Grade assessment

Fine to Very Fine. The coin shows moderate wear on Lincoln's hair and the wheat lines, but details are clear and legible.

Mintage & rarity

309,632,000; Common. This was a high-mintage year.

Authenticity & counterfeit red flags

Check for proper weight (3.11g) and diameter. Verify the 1936 date style matches official dies. Bronze cents should be non-magnetic.

Notable varieties & errors

The 1936 Doubled Die Obverse (DDO) is a significant variety where doubling is most visible in the motto and date.

Similar coins

Often confused with the 1936-S or 1936-D, which have mint marks below the date. Also visually similar to the 1943 Steel Cent, though that is silver in color.

Care & preservation

Store in a PVC-free flip or archival-safe folder. Do not clean or polish the coin, as this removes the original patina and significantly lowers collector value.