The current mintage data for the 1879 Morgan including proofs is: 27,550,100 coins.
With current mintage data, 129,929,633 Morgan dollars were struck at the San Francisco Mint.
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.
423,515
The coins in this range of dates combined with varieties, mintmarks and grades has more than 500 possible answers. Please be a little more specific. Many printed and on-line price guides are available.
The 1879 Trade Dollar is a Proof only issue coin and many are counterfeited. A genuine example is valued well over $2,000.00
tom has 39 silver dollars
39
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.
With current mintage data, 129,929,633 Morgan dollars were struck at the San Francisco Mint.
Are silver coins made by the US Mint. Quarters, Dimes, Half dollars and dollars struck for circulation dated 1964 and prior are 90% silver. Half dollars dated 1965-1970 are 40% silver. All US coins intended for circulation dated 1971 and later are not silver. The US has and does mint silver coins intended for collectors including the American Silver Eagle, since 1992 they have made a silver proof set and there have been many silver commemorative coins minted.
The mintage numbers are stated below.P-397,500CC-124,500S-703,000
The term "silver dollar" is often mistakenly used for any $1 coin, but in fact true silver dollars haven't been minted for almost 80 years, at least in the US. American silver dollars were minted from 1794 to 1935, with many gaps. All of these coins were made of 90% silver and 10% copper.No new US $1 coins were made for circulation until 1971, and none of these contain silver except as noted below. Eisenhower and SBA dollars were struck in copper-nickel clad alloy while modern Sacajawea and Presidential dollars are made of brass.Note - Some Eisenhower dollars were struck in 40% clad silver and sold in special collectors' sets, but these coins weren't intended for circulation. In addition, an experimental run of 90% silver dollars was made in 1964 but the coins were never released to the public.
if a silver dollar is 90% silver it would take 1 and 1/10th silver dollars to make an ounce of silver
Total mintage of 1918 Walking Liberty halves is 20,769,040
Silver dollars were minted from 1794 to 1935, with occasional suspensions during times of low demand. Early records are spotty but according to PCGS, total mintage during that time was approximately 855,435,000 not counting Trade Dollars.
Please rephrase your question. Their value depends on their dates and mint marks. Half-dollars dated 1971 and later are made of copper-nickel and are only worth 50¢ Half-dollars from 1965 to 1969 are made of 40% silver and are worth about $2.50, depending on the current price of silver. Half-dollars dated 1964 and earlier are made of 90% silver and are worth at least $6.00 based on the price of silver. Many from the mid-1940s to 1964 are only worth that amount but older ones may be worth more to a collector.
silver dollars should all be 1 ounce give or take a few grams