nothing it holds no monetary value
MoreThese are replica coins made of base metal and plated with a small amount of gold. They're not official US Coins; they're privately-made items sold by a number of on-line dealers, TV shopping shows, etc. The selling price can be quite high ($20 or more) considering that they contain hardly any precious metal. In addition there's not much of a secondary market for them so you'd be unlikely to get anything like its original price if you tried to re-sell.less than the American dollar bill.
Rutherford B. Hayes was the 19th President of the United States, serving from 1877 to 1881. The Hayes dollar coin was minted in 2011, and is worth one dollar.
Those are the years Ulysses S. Grant was President. It's a modern Presidential dollar coin, minted in 2011, and is worth one dollar.
This stuff ends up on eBay or in a dealers junk box at coin shows and has little resale value.
The 2 gold Half Union coins that exist are in the Smithsonian the values are unknown. Nether one has ever been bought or sold. A few copper specimens were struck (proof only) and the last one that sold at auction went for $575,000.000 in January of 2009
less than the American dollar bill.
Rutherford B. Hayes was the 19th President of the United States, serving from 1877 to 1881. The Hayes dollar coin was minted in 2011, and is worth one dollar.
Those are the years Ulysses S. Grant was President. It's a modern Presidential dollar coin, minted in 2011, and is worth one dollar.
This stuff ends up on eBay or in a dealers junk box at coin shows and has little resale value.
Mauritian dollar ended in 1877.
$40 to $40,000 depending upon the mint mark and the condition of the coin.
above the d on dollar
The 2 gold Half Union coins that exist are in the Smithsonian the values are unknown. Nether one has ever been bought or sold. A few copper specimens were struck (proof only) and the last one that sold at auction went for $575,000.000 in January of 2009
If it's a copy, then it's worth little to nothing. It's made of some base metal, then gold plated.
Although "Miss Liberty" is seated the coin is not a Liberty Seated dollar (1840-1873), it's a 1877 TRADE DOLLAR (1873-1885) as stated on the reverse. Authentic circulated examples have retail values of $120.00- $350.00. NOTE: The entire series of these coins is known to have replicas, copy's & counterfeits.
The only US coin with Hayes on it has a face value of $1 and that is what it is worth. ( A coin dealer has to make a profit and he can't get them for less than a dollar, so he would charge more for one. )
On the reverse(tails) it is above the "D" in dollar.