The 1890 Morgan was struck at all 4 Mints. So if it was made at the Carson-City Mint the mintmark is on the reverse, under the DO in DOLLAR.
A "Carson City Morgan Dollar" is simply a Morgan dollar produced at the Carson City, Nevada, mint. Such a coin can be identified by the mintmark "CC" on the reverse of the coin, beneath the tail feathers of the eagle.
In 1890 all 4 then-active mints produced silver dollars. The mint mark position is on the back, above the DO in DOLLAR. No mint mark = Philadelphia S = San Francisco O = New Orleans CC = Carson City
The value of 1889 Morgan silver dollar replica ranges from $23.01 to $26.76
If you have a 1895 Morgan with a Carson-City mintmark it's fake. 1893 was the last CC Morgan dollar.
Sorry no such coin.
If you mean a 1880 Carson City Morgan dollar? circulated examples run from $100.00-$300.00
The value for an 1879P morgan silver dollar, uncirculated, is about $45 (Red Book) price. If you have any Morgan's that have mintmark, CC, Carson City, the value goes up.
No such thing. The Carson City Mint didn't open until 1870, and the Morgan dollar wasn't introduced until 1878.
There were no silver dollars struck at Carson City in 1887. Any 1887 dollar with a CC mint mark is a counterfeit.
It will have "CC" in the mint mark position, on the reverse side above the DO in DOLLAR.
Because it's not actually uncirculated.And "Morgan City" isn't the correct name. They're called "Morgan" dollars, because the designer was named Morgan, and some were minted in Carson City.