Your question makes no sense. Eisenhower wasn't president until 1953, and he wasn't on a coin until 1971.
In order to give an accurate estimate, the coin should be seen. I suggest you take it to a coin dealer and have it appraised.
50.00
Dwight D. Eisenhower. The coin is actually made of copper-nickel, not silver.
The coin honors Dwight D. Eisenhower, who was president from 1953 to 1961 and Supreme Allied Commander during WWII. Note that most Eisenhower dollars are made of copper-nickel. Silver versions were only minted for collectors.
No US president has been on a SILVER (1794-1935) one dollar coin, but if you mean a large one dollar coin dated from 1971 to 1978 made of copper-nickel, it's Dwight D. Eisenhower.
$1. I'm assuming you mean an Eisenhower dollar with a copper band on the reeding? That is because the Eisenhower dollar was struck in copper-nickel and not silver, as such it is only worth $1.
Dwight David Eisenhower was on the US dollar coin from 1971-1978 Circulation versions of the coin were made of copper-nickel so they're only worth $1 unless the coin is in an original mint set. Special versions were struck in 40% silver and these can be worth on average $4 or $5 depending on variety.
The Eisenhower Dollar is a $1 coin issued by the United States government from 1971-1978 (not to be confused with the Eisenhower commemorative dollar of 1990, or the Presidential $1 Coin Program, which will feature Eisenhower in 2015). The Eisenhower Dollar followed the Peace Dollar and is named for General of the Army and President Dwight David Eisenhower, who appears on the obverse. Both the obverse and the reverse of the coin were designed by Frank Gasparro.The Eisenhower dollar was the last dollar coin to contain a proportional amount of base metal to lower denominations; it has the same amount of copper-nickel as two Kennedy half dollars, four Washington Quarters, or ten Roosevelt dimes. Because of this, it, like its predecessors, had a cumbersome and excessively large size, leading to their short time in circulation and replacement by the smaller, but even less popular, Susan B. Anthony dollar in 1979.
Most are copper with nickel coating. A few special collector versions from the San Francisco Mint actually do contain silver. Look for the letter S below Eisenhower, and the rim of the coin will be silver, not copper.
Unless the coin was released as part of a special mint set and made out of silver, (they are identifiable by having "s" mintmarks) Eisenhower dollars are made out of a copper core and a copper/nickel alloy for the outside coating.
That depends on which one dollar coin you mean. Anything 1935 and earlier had some version of Liberty on it. Then the large dollars in the 1970s had President Dwight D. Eisenhower. The small dollars immediately following showed Susan B. Anthony. In 2000, there was the introduction of a new golden small dollar (made mostly of copper) with an image of Sacagawea. Then starting in 2007 are Presidential dollars, which will eventually have pictures of every US President (four new coins per year).
Most are nickel-plated copper. The only Eisenhower dollars that contain any silver are collector issues minted in San Francisco.
The only $1 coins struck in 1977 were made of copper-nickel, not silver, and they carried a picture of President Eisenhower, not Miss Liberty. Please see the Related Question for details.
All true silver dollars (i.e. the ones made of 90% silver and 10% copper) carry various images of Miss Liberty on the front and an eagle on the back. The last true silver dollars were minted in 1935. New $1 coins are sometimes called "silver" dollars but they're actually copper-nickel or brass: 1971-78: President and General Dwight Eisenhower 1979-81 and 1999: Womens' rights advocate Susan B. Anthony 2000-present: Native American guide Sacajawea 2007-present: Portraits of each president, 4 per year, in the order that they served in office.