August 22, 2009 The Philadelphia mint produced 9,163,984 Morgan Dollars in 1881. The circulated and uncirculated values of these coins are shown in the following list: Circulated Grades.............1881-P G4......................................$16 F12....................................$18 VF30..................................$20 EF40..................................$21 AU55.................................$24 Uncirculated GradesMS60...................................$34 MS62...................................$40 MS63...................................$56 MS64...................................$132 MS65...................................$780 MS66...................................$3560 MS67...................................$17,190
Morgan silver dollar minted in New Orleans, Louisiana [ O mint mark ] in 1881.........5,708,000
The mintage number for 1884-O Morgan dollars was 9,730,000.
PCGS lists the mintage at 10,710,000
.77344 of an ounce of pure silver.
The 1884 is a common Morgan dollar, values are $17.00-$26.00 for average coins.
Because it's not actually uncirculated.And "Morgan City" isn't the correct name. They're called "Morgan" dollars, because the designer was named Morgan, and some were minted in Carson City.
Peace dollars were minted from late 1921 to 1935. Your coins are called Morgan dollars after their designer, George T. Morgan. There's more information at the related questions.
No mint mark means the coin was minted in Philadelphia.
The 1884 Morgan Dollar is common, average retail value is $30.00-$40.00 for a example in circulated condition.
The 1884 Morgan Dollar is common, average retail value is $23.00-$31.00 for a example in circulated condition
The 1884 Morgan Dollar is common, average retail value is $30.00-$40.00 for a example in circulated condition.
Circulated coins are valued at $17.00-$26.00, the 1884-O Morgan is common.
Trade dollars were US coins made in silver to trade in the far East. However, your coin, if it is an 1884 Trade Dollar, it is counterfeit. There were only 10 examples minted that year, all of them are known. So, when it comes to value, the only value your coin can have is if it is minted in real silver, if it is minted in real silver, it is worth however much silver is in your coin. If it is silver plated lead, or silver plated copper, or non-silver alloy like "nickel silver" your coin is essentially worthless.
A 1884 Silver Dollar - aka - Morgan Dollar - is worth in good condition (G4): $18; if its mint state is MS60, the value rises to: $40.
The date of 1884 would make it a Morgan silver dollar. Assuming the coin is circulated and does not have a mintmark. Current values are from $30.00-$40.00 USD depending on the condition (grade) of the coin.
The 1884 Morgan dollar is common, circulated coins have retail values of $17.00-$26.00. Mint State coins are in the $30.00-$50.00 range.