This question is confusing. With a date of 1890, the coin would be a Liberty Seated quarter, but they do not have the motto E-PLURIBUS-UNUM. Please take a closer look at the date and post new question.
value of an 1890 E Pluribus umun silver dollar
The coin is actually a Morgan dollar. Retail values are $32.00-$38.00 for a circulated coin.
A lot of coins say E Pluribus Unum. If the date says 1776-1976, it's a bicentennial quarter, half dollar, or dollar. Whichever coin you have, it's worth face value.
The phrase "E pluribus unum" is found on all U.S. coinage. A coin dated 1884 with an eagle on it could be a quarter, half dollar, or dollar.
$17.00-$26.00 and it's a Morgan Dollar NOT a E PLURIBUS UNUM dollar
value of an 1890 E Pluribus umun silver dollar
The coin is actually a Morgan dollar. Retail values are $32.00-$38.00 for a circulated coin.
A lot of coins say E Pluribus Unum. If the date says 1776-1976, it's a bicentennial quarter, half dollar, or dollar. Whichever coin you have, it's worth face value.
The phrase "E pluribus unum" is found on all U.S. coinage. A coin dated 1884 with an eagle on it could be a quarter, half dollar, or dollar.
Since I think the 1860s, all American coins have had "E Pluribus Unum" on them somewhere. You'll need to be more specific. What's the face value of the coin (penny, nickel, dime, quarter, half-dollar, dollar)? And what condition is it in?
No such thing as a E-PLURIBUS-UNUM coin of any kind. The coin is a MORGAN dollar, the motto E PLURIBUS UNUM is on all the Morgans from 1878 to 1904 and 1921. Post new question with a DATE.
$17.00-$26.00 and it's a Morgan Dollar NOT a E PLURIBUS UNUM dollar
Not at all.
$558.00
The coin is a 1922 Peace dollar not an E PLURIBUS UNUM coin, circulated coins have retail values of $16.00-$20.00.
yes
$558.00