No, its not real silver. It's made of copper and nickel.
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.
Check the coin again and you should see that it is a peace dollar. Susan B Anthony dollars were made from 1979 to 1981 and again in 1999. The answer to the question is no a peace dollar does not stick to a magnet. This is because it is made of 90% silver and 10% copper and neither have magnetic properties. A Susan B Anthony dollar won't stick either.
The Susan B Anthony dollar was made from 1979 to 1981 and again in 1999. But the coin isn't really silver - it's made of copper-nickel like other circulation-strike dimes, quarters, and half dollars produced since the 1960s.
It's made of copper and nickel, not silver, and it's still worth one dollar.
The coin is not a "Liberty" silver dollar, it's a Susan B. Anthony and was never made from silver only copper-nickel. The coin is still in circulation today and is face value.
Dollar piece
Susan B. Anthony.Note that Anthony dollars were discontinued in 1999. They're made of copper-nickel, not silver, and are only worth $1 in circulated condition.
silver dollars are no longer made by the US mints. (Philadelphia and Denver.) today presidential gold dollars are used, not silver dollars. the reason for this is because the most recent silver dollar looked like a quarter. The most recent silver dollar made by the US mints was called The Susan B. Anthony Silver Dollar. Its name is self explanatory on who is on the front of it, Susan B. Anthony.
1979 would make it a Susan B. Anthony dollar coin, which is still only worth one dollar. And it's not made of silver, but rather 91.67% copper and 8.33% nickel.
It's a Susan B. Anthony dollar, not a "Susan coin". The denomination is right there on the back, like all other U.S. coins. It's made of cupro-nickel, not silver. You can see the copper edge. It's worth one dollar.
The coin is not a "Liberty" silver dollar, it's a Susan B. Anthony and was never made from silver only copper-nickel. The coin is still in circulation today and is face value
Sorry, the Susan B. Anthony dollar was never struck in silver. They were made of copper-nickel just like dimes, quarters, and half dollars. Unless it's an uncirculated or proof coin, it's only worth $1.