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Penny (U.S. coin)

{| align=right cellpadding=2 cellspacing=2 border=2\n|-\n| colspan=2 align=center bgcolor="goldenrod"|Cent (United States)\n|-\n|Value:\n|0.01 US dollars\n|-\n|Mass:\n|2.500 g\n|-\n|Diameter:\n|19.05 mm\n|-\n|Thickness:\n|1.55 mm\n|-\n|Edge:\n|plain\n|-\n|Composition:\n|Copper-plated Zinc
97.5% Zn, 2.5% Cu\n|-\n| colspan=2 align=center bgcolor="goldenrod"| Obverse\n|-\n| colspan=2 align=center | \n|-\n|Design:\n|Abraham Lincoln\n|-\n|Designer:\n|V.D. Brenner\n|-\n|Design Date:\n|1909\n|-\n| colspan=2 align=center bgcolor="goldenrod"| Reverse\n|-\n|Design:\n|Lincoln Memorial\n|-\n|Designer:\n|Frank Gasparro\n|-\n|Design Date:\n|1959\n|} \nThe United States one-cent coin, commonly called a penny, is a unit of currency equaling one 1/100 of a United States dollar. Its current design features the profile of President Abraham Lincoln on the obverse and the Lincoln Memorial on the reverse. The Lincoln obverse design has been in place since 1909, when it was added to commemorate the centennial of Lincoln's birth. The original artist who executed Lincoln's portrait was Victor David Brenner. The reverse design, executed by Frank Gasparro, was introduced in 1959, the sesquicentennial of Lincoln's birth. Coins minted after 1982 consist of 97% zinc, 3% copper, and ones before that were 95% copper, 5% zinc. This was changed because the intrinsic value of the coin started to rise above one cent. In 1943, during the Second World War, they were made of zinc-plated steel (for a short time) due to other demands for copper. The cent has gone through several designs over its two-hundred year history. Initially, it was much larger than it is today, about the size of the current United States half dollar coin. Despite the prevalence of the common term "penny", the U.S. Mint has never actually minted a coin having that name.

See also

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United States coinage
\n\nCategory:Currencies of the United States

"I choose a block of marble and chop off whatever I don't need." - Francois-Auguste Rodin (1840-1917), when asked how he managed to make his remarkable statues