The only "$1" coins struck in 1990 were 1 oz silver bullion coins made for investors and collectors, and they carried the famous Walking Liberty image, not a portrait.
The only "$1" coins struck in 1990 were 1 oz silver bullion coins made for investors and collectors, and they carried the famous Walking Liberty image, not a portrait.
You need to state what the denomination is, I.E., 25 Cents. 50 Cents, 1 Dollar....FYI silver is worth about $30 per ounce.
The U.S. made no dollar coins in 1990.
Check the price of silver. It is priced by the oz so it will be easy.
Retail is about $30.00 maybe more if it's proof deep cameo
Do you mean the circulating dollar coin minted from 1971 to 1978, or the commemorative coin issued in 1990? The circulating coins are worth only a dollar each. The commemoratives are worth about $15.
This is a bullion coin sold for its silver value, currently about $17/oz. The "$1" denomination is artificial.
You have a bullion piece sold for its metal content, which is inscribed right on the back of the coin. ".999" is a relative fineness, which is a fancy way of saying it's a decimal value of purity - i.e. 99.9% pure silver.
At lease $1000.00
a lot like 1,000 dollar
about 75 cents
twenty dollars