The mint mark is under the date, and there is no silver in the coin
actually the d is above the year.
President Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Dwight D. Eisenhower. The coin is actually made of copper-nickel, not silver.
The US did not mint a dollar coin in 1968, therefore you don't have a 1968-D silver dollar.
A 1978-D Eisenhower dollar has no silver in it and is only face value.
If it has an S mint mark and a whitish color, it's made of copper and silver. If it has a D mint mark above the date or no mint mark (Phila.) it's actually made of copper and nickel. Please see the Related Question for more.
AnswerMintage = 92,548,511Considered common, in circulated condition, it has no added value.A nice uncirculated one is worth about $2.50AnswerDespite the name "silver dollar", circulation-issue 1972 dollars were struck in copper-nickel. There were collector pieces struck in 40% silver. These should still be in their presentation cases and are worth maybe $5 or so.
Where it was minted. D=Denver
It's actually made of copper-nickel, not silver. The mint mark position is the same on all Eisenhower dollars, between the date and the bottom of Ike's image. No mint mark = Philadelphia D = Denver S = San Francisco (collectors' versions only)
The 1963-D Franklin half dollar is the highest mintage of the series, most are valued for the silver at about $6.00.
On the reverse above the D in Dollar.
No its not. The letters are the initials of Frank Gasparro who designed the coin. The only mint marks used today on dollar coins are P, S, and D.
It's actually made of copper-nickel, not silver. The mint mark position is the same on all Eisenhower dollars, between the date and the bottom of Ike's image. No mint mark = Philadelphia D = Denver S = San Francisco (collectors' versions only)