The value to a collector is nothing, this stuff has no value at all unless you find some one that wants it.
Wiki User
∙ 11y agoWiki User
∙ 11y agoThis piece has no numismatic value. It IS NOT a U.S. Mint issue. The value is only what someone is willing to pay.
Mintmark's are used on coins, they do not have "proof marking's". The 1887 Morgan dollar without a mintmark was struck at the Philadelphia Mint.
The 1895 Morgan dollar is a proof only issue and is valued at well over $30,000.00
The 1921 Chapman was a proof version of the Morgan Dollar. Very few were minted and because of this, they command a premium price.
The value to a collector is nothing, this stuff has no value at all unless you find some one that wants it.
Yes. All Morgan silver dollars were made with 90% silver and 10% copper.
The designation "PF" for any coin means it's a Proof coin. Proof coins are given a grade from PF60 to PF70.
In 1885 the Philadelphia Mint struck 17,787,000 coins for general circulation and 930 Proof coins.
It depends greatly on the year, early silver dollar proof dollars can be worth several thousand dollars, modern silver dollar proofs of common dates might be worth $20 or so for silver scrap.
The last year for Morgan dollars was 1921.
An authentic Philadelphia issued (no mintmark) 1895 Morgan dollar has a average minimum value of $15,000.00. This is a very low mintage Proof only coin that is rare. Many copy's an replicas exist.
1895 is a proof only issue and the key-date of all proof Morgans, some have sold for under $50,000.00 others anywere from $53,000.00 to over $500,000.00
Technically no, Trade dollars were issued in 1878, but these coins were not intended for domestic use. And Proof Trade dollars were struck from 1879-1885 but were not released for general export. All Morgan dollars from 1878 to 1904 were struck and released for circulation.