Indian-head $5 gold pieces ("half eagles") were made from 1908 to 1929 at the following mints:
> Philadelphia (no mint mark)
> Denver ("D")
> San Francisco ("S")
> New Orleans ("O", 1909 only)
The mint mark position is on the reverse side at the left of the arrowheads.
Mint marks were placed in different locations on each different coin series.
The coin is a Sacagawea dollar.
One dollar.
The 1851 Indian Head dollar is a well known novelty piece, so a real coin does not exist.
Sacagawea
Mint marks were placed in different locations on each different coin series.
The coin is a Sacagawea dollar.
Yes Sacajawea is on a dollar coin
One dollar.
The 1851 Indian Head dollar is a well known novelty piece, so a real coin does not exist.
Sacagawea
The coin you are referring to is a US $1 gold coin, commonly known as the Indian Head or Indian Princess gold dollar. These coins were minted between 1849 and 1889 and feature an image of Liberty as an Indian woman on the obverse side and a representation of a bald eagle on the reverse side.
0.018 in the us dollar currency.
The Sacagawea Golden Dollar Coin
The 1856 One Dollar Indian Princess Head is a coin that really needs to be seen for a value. This coin was struck at 3 different mints and has 2 types, a large head and a small head. Values depend on which one you have and are $125.00 to over $1,000.00 for the coin in the low grade of G-4 depending on which coin it is. Take the coin to a dealer for a better idea of value.
By the denomination on the reverse of the coin, and the size.
An 1857 Indian Head gold one dollar coin should weigh 1.672 grams.