President Abraham Lincoln
The U.S. Mint first issued this design in 2010. The obverse (heads) shows the image of President Abraham Lincoln used on the penny since 1909. The shield on the reverse (tails) represents Lincoln’s preservation of the United States as a single country.
When did the tail side of the penny change?
2009
The Presidential $1 Coin Act of 2005 required that the cent’s reverse be redesigned in 2009. This resulted in the mintage of four different coins showing scenes from Abraham Lincoln’s life in honor of the bicentennial of his birth.
Is it lucky to find penny tails up?
Though pennies are not worth much, picking them up was also considered good luck because it increased your wealth. If one side of a penny brings good luck, the other side brings bad. This is where the heads up for luck and tails for bad luck comes from. If you find a penny with the “good” side up, pick it up.
What’s the design on the new Lincoln penny?
The new penny designs, which appeared on the reverse, or “tails” side, depict four different periods in the life of revered U.S. President Abraham Lincoln. While the obverse remains unchanged. The United States Mint released the new pennies one at a time, each about three months apart.
Who is on the back of the US penny?
The man on our pennies today is Abraham Lincoln, our 16th president. During the time the Lincoln design has appeared on the obverse (front), several different designs have been used on the reverse (back): first a wheat design, then the Lincoln Memorial. Four designs were used in 2009 (see below), and the union shield design first appeared in 2010.
What’s the inscription on a 1956 Lincoln penny?
The obverse side of the 1956 Lincoln penny is dominated by the profile of Abraham Lincoln. To the left of the President’s image is a raised inscription which reads “Liberty.” Opposite the Liberty inscription is one that reads the 1956 year of minting.
Why does the u.s.penny have a shield on it?
As a 2005 law directs, the shield design symbolizes President Abraham Lincoln’s preservation of the United States as a single country. The familiar portrait of Lincoln remains on the front of the coin. The union shield used in the design dates back to the 1780s.