Assuming the coin is circulated and has no mintmark, the 1890 Morgan dollar is a common date of the series. For an accurate assessment of value the coin needs to be seen and graded. Most coins of this type have seen heavy use and show a lot of wear. In general retail values for low grade coins are $17.00-$19.00, better grade are $20.00-$21.00 and coins showing almost no wear run from $22.00-$28.00. Values are a market average and only for coins in collectible condition, coins that are bent, corroded, scratched or have been cleaned have far less value if any to a collector or dealer
The James Madison Presidential dollar is made of brass, not silver, and is worth one dollar.
None were made.
== == There is NO gold in a Morgan dollar. They are all large coins, 38.1 mm in diameter, and made of 90% silver and 10% copper as were all silver coins up till 1964. If the coin you have in question is truly an 1890 gold dollar it will be smaller than a dime and the specie weight value will be around $50.00. The coin must be seen to be properly appraised. As noted above the Morgan Dollar is a Silver Coin and not a gold piece.
It is impossible to say. It has no collector value, but certain copies are made out of better metals than others. If it was made out of silver it would be worth about $25, but if it was made out of copper, lead, steel or nickel it might only be worth a few cents at the most. Since copies are made out of a variety of materials, without seeing the coin in person I can't tell you what it is worth.
All circulating 1776-1976 dollar coins are made of copper with a nickel coating, and are still worth one dollar. However, if it's one of the silver versions made for collectors, then it's worth about $7. All silver specimens were minted in San Francisco.
The James Madison Presidential dollar is made of brass, not silver, and is worth one dollar.
It's made of nickel, not silver, and realistically is still worth one dollar.
The 1890 Morgan was struck at all 4 Mints. So if it was made at the Carson-City Mint the mintmark is on the reverse, under the DO in DOLLAR.
It is not a "liberty" dollar, it is a Susan B. Anthony dollar. It is not silver,, has never been made out of silver, and is only worth $1. They are in common circulation.
5-5-11>> If you mean a real silver dollar made in 1935 or BEFORE, as of today they are worth $29.00 just for the silver.
None were made.
There was no silver dollar in the US made in 1957. It might be a half dollar. These are usually worth about $10-15.
That depends. If it is a regular dollar made for circulation it contains no silver and is worth face value. But if it's a collectors silver dollar in witch case it should say something like .999 silver then its worth its weight in silver, value changes with the silver market.
== == There is NO gold in a Morgan dollar. They are all large coins, 38.1 mm in diameter, and made of 90% silver and 10% copper as were all silver coins up till 1964. If the coin you have in question is truly an 1890 gold dollar it will be smaller than a dime and the specie weight value will be around $50.00. The coin must be seen to be properly appraised. As noted above the Morgan Dollar is a Silver Coin and not a gold piece.
The only dollar coins issued in 1980 were made of cupro-nickel, not silver. They're only worth face value.
If you mean a United States silver dollar none were produced until 1794.
It is impossible to say. It has no collector value, but certain copies are made out of better metals than others. If it was made out of silver it would be worth about $25, but if it was made out of copper, lead, steel or nickel it might only be worth a few cents at the most. Since copies are made out of a variety of materials, without seeing the coin in person I can't tell you what it is worth.