Please check the coin again, Susan B. Anthony first appered on the 1979 one dollar coin, with a date of 1924 the coin is a Peace dollar and they were never struck in gold. The last year a gold US one dollar coin was made was 1889.
I'm assuming you mean the Sacajawea Dollar which is minted in gold-coloured brass (Susan B Anthony dollars were last minted in 1999) it is a common coin struck in brass and not gold and is worth $1.
No.
A "gold" 1979 Susan B Anthony dollar would be a regular dollar coated in gold (or gold paint). Numismatically, it's worth about a dollar. If it is coated with real gold AND it is a thick enough to be worth anything AND you could get the gold off, it might be worth a bit more (especially if you could salvage the coin itself for a dollar). Broadly speaking, "collectable coins", such as this, aren't.
It isn't silver, it isn't gold. All Susan B Anthony coins are copper-nickel, someone might have added gold plating to the coin which doesn't do anything to increase the value and is viewed as damage to the coin by collectors. Your coin is only worth $1.
I work at an Ohio bank and received one of these coins yesterday. It is a Susan B Anthony, not some other woman and it is gold colored. It's not, however, real gold and the value is still $1. Still kind of cool to own though.
I'm assuming you mean the Sacajawea Dollar which is minted in gold-coloured brass (Susan B Anthony dollars were last minted in 1999) it is a common coin struck in brass and not gold and is worth $1.
No.
A "gold" 1979 Susan B Anthony dollar would be a regular dollar coated in gold (or gold paint). Numismatically, it's worth about a dollar. If it is coated with real gold AND it is a thick enough to be worth anything AND you could get the gold off, it might be worth a bit more (especially if you could salvage the coin itself for a dollar). Broadly speaking, "collectable coins", such as this, aren't.
It isn't silver, it isn't gold. All Susan B Anthony coins are copper-nickel, someone might have added gold plating to the coin which doesn't do anything to increase the value and is viewed as damage to the coin by collectors. Your coin is only worth $1.
I work at an Ohio bank and received one of these coins yesterday. It is a Susan B Anthony, not some other woman and it is gold colored. It's not, however, real gold and the value is still $1. Still kind of cool to own though.
The U.S. Mint did not issue any gold Susan B. Anthony dollar coins.
Not 1776, not Susan B. Anthony, or not a $20 gold coin.Please look at a history book. Susan B. Anthony wasn't born until 1820, and the US was involved in a little thing called the Revolutionary War in 1776 so they weren't minting $20 gold coins.
There's no such coin:All 1979 $1 coins have a picture of Susan B. Anthony, not Miss Liberty.They were struck in copper-nickel, not gold. Gold is no longer used for circulating coins.Even if you have a plated Anthony dollar, it's only worth $1.
None of the SBA coins made for general circulation are worth more than face value. Only Proof and collectors coins sold from the US Mint are worth more.The coins are still in circulation.
Not Susan B. Anthony - President Eisenhower! And not silver, either - copper-nickel. In any case all circulating dollar coins dated 1971 or later are only worth face value. They do not contain any precious metals like silver or gold, only copper-nickel or brass.
2 dollar and fifty cent
Gold-plated, not gold. COMING, not "comming" All SBA dollars were struck in copper-nickel. Some private companies plated them with a thin layer of gold and sold them as "collectibles" at substantial markups. Unfortunately it would cost more to extract the gold than it would be worth, and the underlying coin is only worth $1.