Assuming the coin is circulated and has no mintmark, the 1885 Morgan is a high mintage common date, retail values are $17.00-$26.00 depending on the grade of the coin.
An 1885 Morgan silver dollar is still legal tender at face value of one dollar, though it's currently worth nearly $20 for the silver content. If by chance the coin is golden in color and a little bigger than a quarter, and either says Chester A. Arthur 1881-1885 or Grover Cleveland 1885-1889, then it's a modern presidential dollar, worth one dollar.
228,000 were struck and most all were stored in treasury vaults until the 1950s
There is 24 grams of silver in a 1891 US silver dollar.
There is no silver in a 1972 US half dollar.
There is around .77 ounces in a 1921 US silver dollar.
A real silver dollar has a $25.00 value just for the silver.
A US silver dollar from 1840 to 1935 contains .77344oz of pure silver.
john f. kennedy was on the first silver dollar
The only silver dollar minted by the US Treasury in 1900 was the Morgan Dollar.
If you mean a real silver dollar, such as a Morgan or peace dollar the thickness is 2.4mm
ZERO, because no dollar US coins were made dated 1970
All circulation-strike 1885 silver dollars are Morgan dollars. "Morgan" refers to the sculptor George T. Morgan who designed the coin."Plain" refers to a coin without a mint mark. Up till 1979 Philadelphia did not put a P mint mark on any $1 coins (and on almost all other coins minted there as well). So, an 1885 Morgan dollar minted in Philadelphia is considered to be "plain". Please see the Related Question for more information.To be annoyingly correct, the US also minted "trade dollars" in 1885, but these were intended for use outside of the country. 1885 was the last year trade dollars were minted and all were special proof coins.