Born from a wartime mistake, the 1943 Bronze Lincoln Cent exists because a few leftover bronze planchets slipped through the minting machinery just as America shifted to zinc-coated steel to save copper for the war. That tiny oversight created fewer than twenty known coins, scattered among the Philadelphia, Denver, and San Francisco mints, each with distinct traits that specialists can trace and verify.
At first, officials dismissed the reports as trickery and counterfeits, but metallurgical testing ultimately confirmed what the rumors insisted: the coins were real, and they were extraordinary. As word spread, magnets appeared in kitchens and classrooms, separating common steel cents from non-magnetic bronze dreams. A teenager finding one in his lunch money and later selling it for over $200,000 only fueled the legend. Today, this accidental cent stands as a rare reminder that history sometimes hides in plain sight, waiting in the palm of a hand.
