Please see the Related Question because the coin isn't a silver eagle. "Silver eagles" are modern bullion coins containing 1 oz of silver and sold by the Mint to collectors and investors. What you have is a $1 coin called a Morgan dollar minted for use in ordinary commerce. At the time the price of silver was controlled and the coin was in fact worth exactly one dollar.
Also, All Morgan and Peace dollars carry the motto E Pluribus Unum as do most other U.S. coins so that's not a distinguishing piece of information.
50.00
I have a 1883 $10.00 Gold Liberty Eagle. How much is it worth?
the 1883 silver dollor is worth $24.95.
$17.00-$26.00 and it's a Morgan Dollar NOT a E PLURIBUS UNUM dollar
Assuming no mint marks and the coin shows heavy wear values are $17.00-$20.00 RETAIL
50.00
I have a 1883 $10.00 Gold Liberty Eagle. How much is it worth?
the 1883 silver dollor is worth $24.95.
I have a 1883 b rogers silver co pitcher what is it worth
Please see the Related Question because the coin isn't a silver eagle. "Silver eagles" are modern bullion coins containing 1 oz of silver and sold by the Mint to collectors and investors. What you have is a $1 coin called a Morgan dollar minted for use in ordinary commerce. At the time the price of silver was controlled and the coin was in fact worth exactly one dollar. Also, All Morgan and Peace dollars carry the motto E Pluribus Unum as do most other U.S. coins so that's not a distinguishing piece of information.
With a date of 1883 the coin is not a silver eagle it's a Morgan dollar and is very common in mint state condition. Retail values are $28.00-$50.00 depending on grade.
$4.50-$6.00
$17.00-$26.00 and it's a Morgan Dollar NOT a E PLURIBUS UNUM dollar
Assuming no mint marks and the coin shows heavy wear values are $17.00-$20.00 RETAIL
If you mean a Morgan Dollar coin? The 1883-O (New Orleans) Morgan is common, retail values are $17.00-$26.00 for circulated examples.
Please look at your pocket change. Nearly all American coins carry the motto "E Pluribus Unum" ("From Many, One") so noting that a coin carries that wording isn't specific enough to identify it.
It's copper-nickel, not silver. V is the Roman numeral for 5, so you have a 5 cent coin. See the Related Question for more information.