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What Is The Difference Between A Half Dime And A Nickel?

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 Posted 02/20/2013  05:29 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add matthewvincent to your friends list
Fox,
My sister, in all sincerity, asked me, "Why don't you just call that tiny coin a nickel?"
Well, "Nickel" refers to the metal of which the coin was made.
"Dime" and "Half-Dime" were terms used to describe the minor fractions of the Dollar, which
was based upon a decimal system and not the British system. You can thank Thomas Jefferson
for his efforts to go decimal.
"Just another five cent piece?" A good description, Fox, with the slight addition:
the five cent nickel co-circulated and eventually replaced the earlier five cent silver piece.

Earliest year of issue for the Half Dime - 1794.
Earliest year of the Shield nickel - 1866.


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 Posted 02/20/2013  11:02 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Teach to your friends list
So is a disme a dime? Did they just drop the "s" at some point?
Valued Member
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 Posted 02/20/2013  11:26 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add capsnhawks to your friends list
Yes, the origin of "disme" is from old French vis old English, meaning a 'tenth'. The U.S. minted a half-disme in 1792.
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 Posted 02/20/2013  12:25 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add carlcrneckiy to your friends list
Fox,

Thanks for posting this question. I had wondered this myself. This site is such a great resource. Thanks to all who contribute--including those who ask questions as well as answer them.

Carl
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 Posted 02/20/2013  12:49 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add just carl to your friends list

Quote:
So is a disme a dime? Did they just drop the "s" at some point?

Not a lot of room on a Dime so something had to go. If it was the D, you would have Isme. If it was the E, you'ld have a Dism. The M would leave Dise. So it just had to be the S or make the thing bigger.
It is interesting that Nickels were started in 1866 and yet the Half Dime was still being made in 1873.
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 Posted 02/20/2013  12:57 pm  Show Profile   Check 52Raymo's eBay Listings Bookmark this reply Add 52Raymo to your friends list
"Nickel" didn't always mean 5 cents.
Oregon coin geek.....*** GO BEAVS ! ! ! ***
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 Posted 02/20/2013  2:04 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Conder101 to your friends list

Quote:
It is interesting that Nickels were started in 1866 and yet the Half Dime was still being made in 1873.

The nickel was intended to be a temporary coinage with the silver coin eventually returning to general circulation so the Half Dime was not legislated out of existence at that time. But the nickel was popular with the public, it was larger and easier to handle and less likely to get lost than the tiny Half Dime. Well the public liked it, and the government made a bigger profit from seigniorage on the nickel than they did on the Half Dime so they had no problem letting the public have what they wanted.


Quote:
"Nickel" didn't always mean 5 cents

True, the term "nickel" originally referred to the coppernickel Flying Eagle cent. They were called "nickels" or "nicks".
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 Posted 02/20/2013  7:46 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Fox to your friends list
Weren't Half Dimes also nicknamed "fish scales" because they were so small? Thought I read this somewhere.
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 Posted 02/21/2013  1:55 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Conder101 to your friends list
I've heard it, but I have also heard the term used to mean the Canadian silver five cent piece and the US silver Three Cent piece.
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 Posted 02/21/2013  3:04 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Raligard to your friends list



Quote:
Weren't Half Dimes also nicknamed "fish scales" because they were so small? Thought I read this somewhere.


Whenever I hear "Fish Scale" I instantly think of the Canada 5 cent coin that was still minted into the 1920's and even later in Newfoundland.
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 Posted 02/21/2013  3:10 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add SteveCaruso to your friends list
Aye the only difference was metal backing its value. Like 3 cent pieces which were both struck in silver and nickel (and for a while circulating side by side), so were the Half Disme and 5 cent nickel.
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 Posted 03/02/2013  8:54 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Amcarmar to your friends list
This is such a great question! I never new! Silver or not, I will go with a regular nickel!
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 Posted 03/05/2013  12:17 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add baysinger626 to your friends list
So if Disme means 1/10, and dime is the same, nickles are always made of nickel regardless of their value and Canadaian bacon is just ham.. then why dont... what about...
Oh no.. I've gone cross eyed.
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 Posted 03/06/2013  02:16 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add perfessor to your friends list
So if they change the composition of the current 5 cent piece, will it still be called a nickel?
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 Posted 03/06/2013  07:05 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add n9jig to your friends list
Well, the Canadian "nickel" is now steel and they still call it the nickel.

As was posted above, the original Flying Eagle cent was called a "Nickel" due to the nickel content. This made it whiter in appearance than the large copper cents it replaced. The cent reverted to an almost pure (95%) copper format and the copper color returned.

Next, the cupro-nickel 3-cent coin was introduced and this was called a "nickel" to distinguish it from the silver 3-cent coin.

After the cupro-nickel 5-cent coin came along the name transitioned over to it. To this day the same 25% nickel/75% copper composition is used, making the Nickel the coin with the oldest composition. All other circulating coins have changed composition in the 20th century, the nickel (save for the 42-45 wartime silver mix) has remained the same. The nickel is also the only circulating coin that is actually a single alloy, since 1982 all the other coins are either clad or plated.
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