Gold plating does not add any value to a coin. In this case it could have brought the value down. It is now worth only its silver content which is around $24.
The U.S. has never made gold quarters. It likely has been gold plated or just toned a gold color. Either way, it has no collectible value.
These items are solidly encased in plastic and are in a dark blue case with gold trim and an eagle on top. The 1999 set, which contains a penny, nickel, dime, quarter, and dollar, was listed on eBay today (Sept 22, 2009) for as little as $4.95 and as much as $24.95.
The only US half dollar struck in 1922 was the Commemorative Grant Memorial Half dollar and values for uncirculated examples about $100.00
One dollar, and there's no gold in it.
Not much about 25 cents worth it's plated.
One hundred dollars
One hundred dollars
$1 or more.
It's only gold plated. They sell for around $8 on eBay.
The US has NOT made a gold one dollar coin since 1889. The coin you have is a just a gold plated 1977 Eisenhower dollar that's only worth a dollar unless you find someone that wants it.
The plating adds nothing to the value of a dollar coin, unless someone wants it.
The U.S. half dollar has never been made of gold. What you probably have is a gold-plated 1979 half-dollar. It's not really worth much above face value.
Sorry no US one dollar GOLD coins dated 1972. A 1972 one dollar coin is a Eisenhower dollar. None were struck in gold. Many have been privately plated with small amounts of gold and sold as collectibles but are actually only worth a dollar.
The coin is a common bicentennial Eisenhower dollar that MAY have been gold plated or just toned a gold color, the coin is face value.
The US has never made a gold half dollar of any date, it's likely been gold plated take it to a coin dealer for an idea of value.
The U.S. has never made gold quarters. It likely has been gold plated or just toned a gold color. Either way, it has no collectible value.
A golden color to a normal silver dollar could be caused by a number of things: > The coin was gold-plated for use in jewelry or something similar, a very common practice. > It was exposed to heat or chemicals > It tarnished in a way that gave it a golden tint (unlikely, but possible) If it was plated or exposed to chemicals, that destroyed any collectible value the coin may have had. Fortunately, 1922 is the single most common date for Peace dollars so the average collector value isn't much more than its silver value of about $14-16,