There is not enough information to identify this coin. Please examine it again and submit a new question giving the national origin.
The 1986 Statue of Liberty Centennial half dollar is a copper-nickel clad coin. Current retail value is $4.00.
Please post new question with more information and a better description. Is the dual date 1886-1986 on both coins?
Hi I have also been trying to find the value of these coins because I have a 1986 Liberty Trade Silver coin. Ive done the research and these coins were privately manufactured so they are really only worth the silver value of these coins, and the print on them does not contribute at all to their value.
Because the coin is not a silver eagle, with a date 1902 the coin is a MORGAN dollar. The first Silver Eagle was made in 1986.
Nearly all commemorative silver dollars have been struck in an alloy of 90% silver and 10% copper, the same metal that was used for circulating dollar coins up till 1935. Silver "eagle" dollars issued since 1986 are made of 99.9% silver but these are sold for investment rather than as commemoratives. One of the few exceptions would be Bicentennial dollars dated 1776-1976. Special collector versions were made of clad 40% silver. However these aren't strictly commemoratives either, because the same design was used for circulating copper-nickel versions.
Assuming you are referring to an 1886 Morgan Silver dollar the answer is no. But their is a 1986 Statue of Liberty Centennial silver dollar.
The 1986 Statue of Liberty Centennial half dollar is a copper-nickel clad coin. Current retail value is $4.00.
Current average retail value is $29.00
Please post new question with more information and a better description. Is the dual date 1886-1986 on both coins?
It's a 1986 Statue of Liberty Centennial Dollar and is considered a commemorative coin
US mint sets were not made till 1936. Check the dates again.
A U.S. 1986 Kennedy half dollar runs from 50 cents to $25 depend on circulation wear. A U.S. 1986 clad half dollar commemorative Statue of Liberty is valued up to $7.50.
The Statue of Liberty Centennial silver dollar (KM#214) is worth about $13.50, regardless of mint-mark, assuming it has been kept in pristine condition. It is 90% silver, has 0.7736 troy ounces ASW ("Actual Silver Weight"), 38.1mm in diameter, and had a mintage of 723,635 in Philadelphia and 6,414,638 (proof condition) in San Francisco. (Note that silver is about $14.30 per troy ounce as of 11/29/07, so the "melt value" of the silver in the coin is about $11.06.)
This is probably a commemorative coin issued by the US mint in 1986. If so, these one dollar commemorative coins usually weigh in at .95 OZ and are 90% silver. If so, this coin would carry a value of $9.33 melt currently.
None.
If you are asking about a "1986 Statue of Liberty 6 coin commemorative set" in a cherrywood box. The set consist of one each of Proof & Uncirculated half dollar, silver dollar, and gold $5 coins. Current average retail value is $900.00.
Hi I have also been trying to find the value of these coins because I have a 1986 Liberty Trade Silver coin. Ive done the research and these coins were privately manufactured so they are really only worth the silver value of these coins, and the print on them does not contribute at all to their value.