The back of the Walking Liberty half dollar has an eagle on it. The sun is located on the front of the coin just left of Lady Liberty.
Yes. This coin is called a Walking Liberty Half Dollar.
It's the initial of A. A. Weinman, the coin's designer.
There is no true Standing Liberty half dollar. They are properly called Walking Liberty half dollars. But if you are asked to buy a Standing Liberty half dollar you can be safe to assume that it is a Walking Liberty. Review the Standing Liberty quarter and see that the figure is in an obvious 'standing' stance whereas the Walking Liberty appears to have motion.
W on a Walking Liberty half dollar is the designer's initial (A. A. Weinman). The mint mark location is on the back at roughly the 8:00 position - blank, D, or S.
The Walking liberty design is found only on 50 cent pieces.
The Walking Liberty design was used on half dollars dated 1916-1947 and was brought back on 1 oz silver bullion pieces in 1986. Please check your coin again and post a new question.
The US Mint did not produce any Walking Liberty half dollars in 1932.
Walking Liberty half dollars were minted from 1916 through 1947.
No such coin as a "Walking Statue of Liberty" exists. Please post a new question with the date and denomination of the coin.
The Walking Liberty silver 50-cent piece is composed of 90 percent silver, and 10 percent copper. It was in production from 1916 to 1947, and weighs 12.5 grams.
The walking liberty design was used on half dollars from 1916 to 1947 and wasn't used again until 1986, on 1-oz bullion coins. If your coin has an image of Miss Liberty's head on the front and a spread-winged eagle on the back it's called a MORGAN dollar.
The mint mark position on all Walking Liberty halves after 1917 is the 8:00 position. Possible letters are: Blank = Philadelphia D = Denver S = San Francisco