How do i tell what type of Morgan Dollar i have. its 1881 and i don'y understand this whole cc thing and can't find any markings on the coin. can someone help me identify the value of my coin?
"CC" is on of the possible mint marks on a Morgan dollar. A mint mark indicates where a coin was made; for example, P (or none) means Philadelphia, S = San Francisco, etc. CC indicates Carson City, a mint that operated from 1870 to 1893.
Mint marks can be in many different places depending on the coin. For a Morgan dollar the location is always the same - above the DO in DOLLAR, on the back.
NO known secret markings
Depending on condition and any special markings, a Liberty Seated Dollar, can fetch from $20 to low thousands. (see link below)
a circulated coin is 5 cents uncirculated maybe a dollar.
There is not enough information to identify this coin. Please examine it again and submit a new question giving the national origin.
It will have the date "1950" at roughly the 5:00 position of Hamilton's portrait.
NO known secret markings
Depending on condition and any special markings, a Liberty Seated Dollar, can fetch from $20 to low thousands. (see link below)
Yes, I can.
a circulated coin is 5 cents uncirculated maybe a dollar.
You could probably use a regular one because real dollar bills have special markings and codes on them that make them legit.
It looks like the coin in the related link:
The only "strange marking" is the designer's monogram, a stylized G R, for Gilroy Roberts.
Identify audit procedures that might have detected the improper accounting treatment applied by Dollar General to the transaction with IBM.
All U.S. coinage displays its denomination (face value) on it, usually on the back.
The simple answer is, look on the back of the coin. The rock the eagle is on has the word PEACE on it.
In 1957, the one dollar bill was modified to say 'in God we trust.' The 1957 silver dollar bill is sold online for between 300 and 700 dollars, depending on the bill's markings and overall quality.
A star on a dollar bill marks it as a "replacement note". If there's a problem printing a normal press run of dollar bills, then a series of replacement notes are issued. The star simply serves to identify them.