6-25-11>>> I will take a guess at your "misprint" on the 1922 silver dollar, the spelling of the word trust with a V an not a U. The design of the coin coin is in the classic Roman style with Latin letters, the Latin alphabet has no U and all PEACE dollars have this spelling. It's not a mistake. It's also safe to say none are still in circulation. NOTE: coins are struck, coined or minted NOT printed, only paper money is printed.
The coin is still in circulation today, has no silver and is face value only
The coin is still in circulation today, has no silver and is face value only
Even though they were called "silver" dollars all Ike dollars made for circulation from 1971-78 were struck from cupronickel-clad stock and do not contain any silver. If your coin was taken from circulation it is worth face value. If it's a proof coin it should still be in its original package; proofs retail at around $4 to $6.
Kennedy half dollars are still minted for general circulation in Copper-Nickel Clad Copper for circulation while some Proofs (San Francisco Mint {S}) are made in Silver. Check with your favorite federal bank for one or in rolls.
Half dollars have never been made out of pure silver but all half dollars minted before 1965 are 90% silver, halves dated 1965-1970 are 40% silver. Circulation issue halves dated 1971 and later are copper nickel and thus worth 50 cents. The US still makes commemorative half dollars such as the 90% silver proof half dollars made from 1992-present.
The coin is still in circulation today, has no silver and is face value only
None of the Eisenhower dollars made for general circulation have any silver in them. People call them "Silver Dollars" just because of the size of the coins. 99% of the coins taken from circulation are only face value.
50 cents, contains no silver, and is one of the most common half dollars in circulation.
No Kennedy half dollars made for general circulation after 1969 have any silver, the 1991 is just 50 cents and is still in circulation.
The coin is still in circulation today, has no silver and is face value only
Occasionally old silver U.S. dimes, quarters, and half dollars show up, but most have been pulled from circulation by collectors. Silver coins are seen less frequently in other countries that have redesigned coins since removing silver.
The coin is still found in circulation and is face value
Even though they were called "silver" dollars all Ike dollars made for circulation from 1971-78 were struck from cupronickel-clad stock and do not contain any silver. If your coin was taken from circulation it is worth face value. If it's a proof coin it should still be in its original package; proofs retail at around $4 to $6.
Even though they were called "silver" dollars all Ike dollars made for circulation from 1971-78 were struck from cupronickel-clad stock and do not contain any silver. If your coin was taken from circulation it is worth face value. If it's a proof coin it should still be in its original package; proofs retail at around $4 to $6.
Kennedy half dollars are still minted for general circulation in Copper-Nickel Clad Copper for circulation while some Proofs (San Francisco Mint {S}) are made in Silver. Check with your favorite federal bank for one or in rolls.
Half dollars have never been made out of pure silver but all half dollars minted before 1965 are 90% silver, halves dated 1965-1970 are 40% silver. Circulation issue halves dated 1971 and later are copper nickel and thus worth 50 cents. The US still makes commemorative half dollars such as the 90% silver proof half dollars made from 1992-present.
If they're from circulation, they're cupronickel rather than silver and are only worth face value. If they're in mint sets, they'd be worth a bit more if made from the same clad stock as circulation coins. Eisenhower dollars were also struck in silver-clad composition and are worth to retail in that case.