Exactly one. A Morgan dollar is a specific kind of silver dollar, designed by and named for George T. Morgan and minted from 1878 to 1904 and in 1921.
You need to specify the degree of "fill" desired in your bucket.
A half, a quarter, 27, 434, one, etc. There is no set weight for silver bars and they range in size from a gram or less (about 1/25th of a silver dollar) all the way to multiple kilograms (several hundred silver dollars).
how many times does 1000 dollars are in a million
2.85 dollars
$1 = 1.21 NZ Dollars
Morgan dollars contain 412.500 Grains of silver.
Combined with dates and mintmarks there are 18 Morgan dollars struck in the 20Th century.
There were 12,760,000 1881-S Morgan dollars minted.
There is no difference. They are the same coin but many people refer to them as "Liberty Dollars".
A Morgan dollar has a silver content of .773 of a troy ounce in silver. Keep in mind though that some Morgan Dollars, especially those with a CC mintmark, or Morgan Dollars in mint state, may be worth more to a collector of coins than just their silver content, however, worn or common coins usually sell for only their silver content, especially with how expensive silver is now.
No, in fact there are no 1876 Morgan dollars because the first year of issue of the Morgan dollar was in 1878.
It doesn't exist. "Morgan" describes the silver dollars designed by George T. Morgan that were minted from 1878 to 1904 and in 1921. If your coin is a genuine US silver dollar dated 1800 it would be called a Draped Bust dollar and could be quite valuable, but there are MANY counterfeits. Please see the Related Question for more details.
Carson City Morgan dollars were issued for many years. Each coin has its own value based upon the year it was minted and the condition of the coin.
Morgan dollars weigh about 26.7 grams and they're 90% silver. Grab your calculator and go from there.
Yes, there is a difference. The Morgan Dollar was minted from 1878 to 1904 and then again in 1921, whereas the New Orleans Dollar typically refers to the silver dollars minted in New Orleans during the 19th century and early 20th century. The New Orleans Mint produced silver dollars alongside other US Mint facilities, such as Philadelphia and San Francisco.
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) Demand for silver dollars fluctuated a lot so there were many years when one or more of the mints didn't strike the coins.
There are .7736 troy ounces in United States silver dollars (Morgan, Peace silver dollars). That worked out to the price of silver being fixed at $1.29/ounce. Troy ounces are heavier than avoirdupois ounces (31.1g vs. ~28g).