Only one, the Morgan Dollar. There were three different mintmarks for the mints in Philadelphia (no mark), San Francisco (S), and New Orleans (O).
1897 is a common date for Morgan Silver Dollars, circulated coins are valued at $17.00-$26.00
$500 from 2010 would be worth $11,700 in 1897.
All U.S. silver dollars from that time period carry a picture Miss Liberty's head. The only coins to carry a full-length image were quarters from 1916 to 1930, and half dollars from 1916 to 1947. Please check again and post a new question.
1000 Dollars
It can't be a Trade Dollar. That coin was specially produced during the years 1873-1885 for use in international commerce, and carry the wording TRADE DOLLAR on the reverse. All $1 coins minted in 1897 were Morgan dollars, named for their designer.
$17
Dwight D. Eisenhower was 7 years old in 1897. Please check your coin again.
This is a variation on an extremely old joke. The reason is (drum roll)1,898 silver dollars are worth 1 dollar more than 1,897 dollars (ba DING!)AnswerGenerally speaking, they're not.Value of individual coins depends on date, mintmark, & condition -- all three factors have to be taken into consideration.So like if two coins in equal condition, one dated 1897 and one dated 1898, but one has a mintmark and the other doesn't, then one could be worth significantly more than the other.It all has to do with rarity. Whichever coin has the lowest mintage will generally be worth more money. Mintmarks have to be taken into account, because this indicates which mint facility the coin was made at, and each mint facility wil have different total mintages each year.I hope this helps,Dan
The coin was minted in Philadelphia, PA.
The face belongs to Miss Liberty.
A Winchester model 1897 shotgun is going for 125-500 dollars depending on condition. By the way your model 1897 was made in 1910.
The 1897-S MORGAN dollar is not scarce or rare, an average retail value for the coin is $26.00-$32.00.