It really depends on which coin, a lot of coins were made in 1886. Post new question with more information.
Assuming the coin is circulated and has no mintmark, the 1886 Morgan is a common date coin. Retail values run from $32.00-$39.00. 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 D after the 5 means dollars not cents, the US has never made a five cent gold coin. Take it to a coin dealer for an idea if value.
The penny coin which was worth a cent
I have found a Calvin Coolidge coin of some type. Has picture of Coolidge and brief bio on the back of coin. Any idea what this coin is and when it was made? WHAT IT WORTH
It is impossible to say. Copy coins are made out of a wide variety of materials. A copy coin contains no collector value, but it may be made out of precious metals that could make it be worth something. However, there is no set standard for copy coins, the vast majority of copy "gold" coins are gold plated copper or another base metal, making them nearly worthless. However, there are some gold copy coins made out of solid gold making them be worth a substantial amount of money. Without examining the coin in hand, it is impossible to tell you if you have a coin worth 20 cents or a coin worth $250.
Assuming the coin is circulated and has no mintmark, the 1886 Morgan is a common date coin. Retail values run from $32.00-$39.00. 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.
No. It identifies which mint made the coin. D is for Denver.
a 1886 knife is worth allot only if it's good condition and clean and has some kind of marking on it to say it was made in 1886.
The D after the 5 means dollars not cents, the US has never made a five cent gold coin. Take it to a coin dealer for an idea if value.
A round form of money, worth a certain amount. Any monetary unit that is made of metal. This excludes paper money and promissory notes.
The penny coin which was worth a cent
Be more specific. Try to include a date. Most likely however it is worth only it's metal value. It could be worth less or worth money depending on what it's made of.
If the coin is actually made from gold, it will be worth whatever the gold content is worth. If it is a coin of gold appearance, it will maybe be worth whatever you paid for it.
Genuine 1886 dollars are 38.1 mm in diameter. Your "coin" is less than half the diameter of a dime, so it could not have been struck with anywhere near $1 worth of silver back in 1886. It's a pretty solid bet that you have a privately-made miniature replica. Without knowing what metal it's made of, it's not possible to assign a value, but in general there's not a major secondary market for these pieces. If it turns out to be silver it's at least worth its melt value, which would be a dollar or two.
Since it is a replica, it has absolutely no collector value. However, depending on what material the coin is made of it might have value for scrap. If the coin was made of 90% pure gold like the original, it would be worth ~1600. If such a coin was made in 90% silver, it would be worth ~$20. However, chances are your coin is made out of gold plated copper, nickel, or some other near-worthless metal and is only worth a couple of cents.
This depends on what the coin is made of. If it is made of silver or gold it will be worth more than if it was made of copper or zinc.
The oldest coin ever made would probably be priceless.