$20 gold coins minted by the Confederacy had the name of the United States on them so it is impossible to tell which coin they minted.
i dont even know
About $33,000
The short-lived Confederate States of America only issued two coins, the one cent and the half dollar. A genuine Confederate half dollar is so rare that it does not have a listed value. A number of restrikes were made decades later which run from a few thousand to tens of thousands of dollars in value depending on their wear.
The value is very little or nothing. Reproductions have no numismatic value. Please note that the Confederate States of America never made any gold coins.
Probably nothing. The Confederate States stopped issuing money in April, 1865. The date in the question is 102 years after that date. In the 1950s and 1960s it was not unusual to find ads for wild amounts ($1000, $10,000, etc.) of 'real' Confederate money for one dollar, with the ads placed in comic books.
AnswerThe CSA only issued a small number of low-denomination coins. What you have is almost certainly a fantasy piece with little or no numismatic value.
One Kauai dollar of Hawaii is equivalent to one United States Dollar of all United States of America.
Your coin is either a copy, a fantasy piece, or a counterfeit. All 4 of the genuine Confederate half dollars and the 15 one cent coins are dated 1861
There was no Confederate money in 1845.
Nothing, because the Confederacy no longer existed in 1867.
COPY is a dead giveaway. It's a replica sold as a novelty item in a gift shop, and has little or no value to collectors.
I would not imagine much because I have a whole box of them that I just found in my attic. They must be replicas that were mass printed. Everyone of them have the same serial number on them of 18278.
The value is about 39$ if the bill is in good condition