Assuming the coin is circulated, the 1890-O Morgan dollar is a common New Orleans Mint coin. For an accurate assessment of value the coin needs to be seen and graded. Most coins show a lot of wear. In general retail values for low grade coins are $19.00-$21.00, better grade are $22.00-$23.00 and coins showing almost no wear run from $24.00-$32.00. Values are a market average and only for coins in collectible condition, coins that are bent, corroded, scratched, used as jewelery or have been cleaned have far less value if any to a collector or dealer
Please look at your pocket change. ALL U.S. coins say "E Pluribus Unum" so that doesn't help to ID it. Please post a new question with the coin's date, how worn it is, and whether there is a mint mark on the back (a small O, S, or CC)
The motto E Pluribus Unum is on ALL U.S. coins so that doesn't help with specific identification. Please post a new question with the coin's denomination. Also see if you can find a small mint mark letter such as O or S.
Nearly all US coins have the motto E Pluribus Unum on them so that doesn't help to identify a specific coin. However the description of the mint mark position would indicate that your coin is a silver dollar; the mark would be the letter O and not the number zero which means it was struck at the New Orleans Mint.If that's the case, please see the Related Question for more information.
The motto E PLURIBUS UNUM is not used to identify any US coin regardless. All us coins have the motto. A coin dated 1901 could be a $20.00 gold coin down to a Indian Head cent. The denomination, date , mint mark and condition is what's needed for a assessment.
The mint mark on all modern presidential dollars is on the edge of the coin, along with the date and the motto E PLURIBUS UNUM.
Please look at your pocket change. ALL U.S. coins say "E Pluribus Unum" so that doesn't help to ID it. Please post a new question with the coin's date, how worn it is, and whether there is a mint mark on the back (a small O, S, or CC)
In lightly circulated condition, it's worth $10-$12 .. Unless it has a "CC" mintmark on the back above the "DO" in DOLLAR -- then it's worth $75-$110 Also please note that ALL U.S. coins bear the motto "E Pluribus Unum" ("From many, one") so this is not a distinguishing characteristic of a coin. The denomination, date, mint mark, and condition are the most helpful characteristics to start with.
The coin is very common, circulated examples sell for $17.00-$26.00
Please check your pocket change. ALL coins have the motto E Pluribus Unum so that is not a distinguishing characteristic. Could you post a new question with the coin's date, mint mark, and condition? Thanks!
The motto E Pluribus Unum is on ALL U.S. coins so that doesn't help with specific identification. Please post a new question with the coin's denomination. Also see if you can find a small mint mark letter such as O or S.
Nearly all US coins have the motto E Pluribus Unum on them so that doesn't help to identify a specific coin. However the description of the mint mark position would indicate that your coin is a silver dollar; the mark would be the letter O and not the number zero which means it was struck at the New Orleans Mint.If that's the case, please see the Related Question for more information.
The motto E PLURIBUS UNUM is not used to identify any US coin regardless. All us coins have the motto. A coin dated 1901 could be a $20.00 gold coin down to a Indian Head cent. The denomination, date , mint mark and condition is what's needed for a assessment.
The mint mark on all modern presidential dollars is on the edge of the coin, along with the date and the motto E PLURIBUS UNUM.
With no mint mark, or an O or S over the ONE in ONE DOLLAR, it's worth $17-20. With a "CC" mint mark, that range jumps to $75-100.
Nearly all American coins carry the motto "E Pluribus Unum" so that's not an identifying mark. Please post a new question with the coin's denomination. If there's a mint mark letter on the back include that with your question.
Please take a look at your pocket change. Every single U.S. coin has the motto E Pluribus Unum on it so that doesn't help to ID anything. Post a new question with the coin's denomination, and if you can locate the mint mark, that as well. On coins from 1881 it will be a small O, S, or CC on the reverse side. However the Philadelphia Mint didn't use a letter back then, so your coin may not have a mint mark at all.
Regardless of mint mark value is $14.00-$18.00