Definitely, there have been coins for at least 3000 years.
Which of these was not a form of national currency in the 1800s? A+
Copper coins A+
Modified coins have no collector value. Any value would be associated with the necklace.
in the 1800s are rare.......the Red Book tells you all kinds of rare dates
The 5 Franc coins from the 1800s are called 5 Francs.
Yes, there used to be a gold dollar. There were three designs minted between 1849 and 1889. It was one of the smallest coins the US ever minted.
Huzzlecap is a game taht children from the 1800s palyed. The game works that you through coins into a hat and see who can get the mosts in.
Gold was valuable in the 1800s because it was rare, durable, and could be easily molded into coins and jewelry. It was also seen as a symbol of wealth and power, leading to its high demand and value.
I could answer this question in the 1800s, but lets put ourselves in that time and say that you can use 2 cent pieces.
If you are talking about the coins with presidents on the face and the statue of liberty on the back, they are not made out of gold they are made out of brass. If you are talking about the old 1 dollar coins from the 1800s, they were made out of gold because of the gold rushes and the US government was looking to expand the use of gold in its coins.
"S" indicates it was minted in San Francisco. It's worth $17-20 in average condition. Other mint marks are O - New Orleans, up to 1909 D - Denver, starting in 1906 CC - Carson City, up to 1893 D - Dahlonega, GA, only on gold coins in the mid-1800s C - Charlotte, again on gold coins in the mid-1800s P - Philadelphia, nickels from 1942-45, and all coins except cents starting in 1980 W - West Point, on collectors' coins only. no mint mark - Philadelphia, before 1980
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