Yes. The Philadelphia Mint didn't use the P mint mark on dollar coins until 1979, so all Morgans (1878-1904, 1921) from Philadelphia don't have a mint mark.
The Philadelphia Mint struck 12,290,000 Morgan dollars in 1883, so yes a few were made.
The Carson-City Mint struck Morgan dollars for many years, so a date is needed.
1921 is the only year Morgan dollars were struck at the Denver Mint. No other dates could have a "D" mintmark. All 1921-D Morgan's have a tiny or "micro" mintmark.
The mint mark on Morgan dollars is located on the reverse side, towards the bottom, just above the letters "do" in the word "dollar."
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.
The mint mark position on all Morgan silver dollars is located between the wreath and the DO in DOLLAR. No mint mark = Philadelphia S = San Francisco O = New Orleans CC = Carson City D = Denver (1921 only)
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."
A simple answer is the 1893, 1895 & 1903 Morgan dollars from the New Orleans Mint typicaly have the highest values.
The mint mark on all Morgan Dollars is located on the reverse side of the coin just above the letters "DO" in the word "DOLLAR".
The mint mark position on all Morgan dollars is above the DO in DOLLAR on the reverse. In 1881 these coins were struck at 4 mints: Philadelphia - no mint mark San Francisco - "S" New Orleans - "O" Carson City - "CC"
On Morgan dollars (the type minted at the time), the mint mark is on the back, towards the bottom, just above the letters "do" in the word "dollar." And if there's no mint mark, it means it was minted in Philadelphia.
This is a common date for Morgan dollars. In circulated condition they are worth 32 to 294 dollars. In uncirculated condition they are worth around 1,000 dollars.