The Philadelphia Mint struck 12,290,000 Morgan dollars in 1883, so yes a few were made.
it all depends on the silver content. silver today costs about $16.00 per ounce. be sure to look at the mint mark. if the mint mark is a w, it can be worth thousands of dollars.
The mint mark position on all Peace dollars is near the word ONE on the back. No mint mark = Philadelphia D = Denver S = San Francisco
It's not a mint mark. It's the monogram of Anthony D. Francisci, the coin's designer. The only mint marks are D and S, and they'd be on the back near the word ONE. No mint mark = Philadelphia, of course.
The only dollar coin struck in 1998 was the American Silver Eagle. Although it has one troy ounce of silver in it and is actually a bullion coin, it also has a face value of one dollar. The Philadelphia mint produced 4,847,549 Uncirculated pieces and the San Francisco mint struck 450,000 proof coins.
The mint mark is on the reverse (tails) side, just below the eagle and above the the words ONE DOL. If there is no mint mark, it means the coin was minted in Philadelphia.
The O is the mint mark, it stands for the New Orleans mint.
The mint mark on any Morgan dollar is on the reverse above the letters DO in dollar.
Any US coin without a mint mark was minted in Philadelphia, because for a while, it was the only mint.
1883 Morgan dollars are very common. Coins in the AU (about uncirculated) grade range have values of $22.00-$26.00
it depends on the mint mark. no mint mark 185- 1500 dollars. with cc 900-30,000 dollars. with s mint mark 275 to 16,000 dollars.
The U.S. didn't mint any silver dollars in 1920.
The mint mark (if it has one) on all Morgan silver dollars is on the reverse of the coin just above the letters "DO" in dollar.
It simply means it was minted at Philadelphia. Remember, Philadelphia didn't use a P mint mark on most coins until 1980.
The "S" Mintmark means it was made at the San Francisco Mint
No, only Proof eagles have a W mint mark
For Morgan silver dollars, the mark is on the reverse (tails) side, just above the letters "do" in "dollar." Then on Peace dollars, the mark is also on the reverse, below the word "one."
From 1986 to 2010 the U.S. minted over 200 million silver dollars. The mint mark on these can be found on the back side below the Eagle and slightly to the left hand side.