These tiny coins contain 0.04837 troy ounces of gold, or about 1.7 grams
US $20 gold pieces ("double eagles") minted from 1850 to 1933 contain 30.06 gm of pure gold, or about 0.97 troy ounces. The remainder is copper.
The first circulating $20 gold pieces were made in 1850.
The US didn't exist in 1749 so there would not be any $20 gold coins dated 1749. The first double eagles were minted for circulation in 1850.
The US has never made a gold half dollar.
0.48375 troy ounces (in a real gold dollar from the 1850s)
Sorry, NO US one dollar gold dated 1900
0.018 in the us dollar currency.
Sorry, the US produced no gold one dollar coins in 1933. Post new question.
Gold right now is at $1063 per ounce so that makes one US dollar worth about one 10th of a cent.
I don't think they had dollar coins back then.MoreThe coin is almost certainly a fantasy piece or even a fake. The US didn't strike any gold coins until 1795; the first $20 gold coins were minted until 1849 and the first circulating ones were dated 1850.
NO known 1941 US gold dollars.
If you mean one of the current Presidential Dollars or the Sacagawea Dollar, none - they're made of brass, not gold. If you mean a real gold dollar from the 1850s, .04837 troy ounce.