Want this question answered?
46 dollars
Please post a new question with the coin's denomination. Quarters, half dollars, and silver dollars from 1889 all fit your description.
Your 1889 "e pluribus unum coin" is actually a 1889 Morgan dollar, this series of silver dollars were made from 1878 to 1904 & 1921 at 5 different Mints. The 1889 date is very common and assuming the coin is circulated and has no mintmark retail values are $17.00-$26.00
The mint mark (if it has one) on all Morgan silver dollars is on the reverse of the coin just above the letters "DO" in dollar.
There's no such coin. An 1889 US silver dollar was minted for spending, not for investment, and was very different from modern "silver eagle" coins that do contain 1 oz. of silver. Morgan dollars contained one dollar's worth of silver, about 0.77 troy ounces at the time. The coins' inscriptions indicate their value (ONE DOLLAR on the back) and not their silver weight. There's more information at the Related Question.
46 dollars
Please post a new question with the coin's denomination. Quarters, half dollars, and silver dollars from 1889 all fit your description.
Your 1889 "e pluribus unum coin" is actually a 1889 Morgan dollar, this series of silver dollars were made from 1878 to 1904 & 1921 at 5 different Mints. The 1889 date is very common and assuming the coin is circulated and has no mintmark retail values are $17.00-$26.00
About 5-10 dollars
In circulated condition they are worth on average $16 to $20. 1889 Morgan dollars struck at Philadelphia are not rare dates.
The mint mark (if it has one) on all Morgan silver dollars is on the reverse of the coin just above the letters "DO" in dollar.
There's no such coin. An 1889 US silver dollar was minted for spending, not for investment, and was very different from modern "silver eagle" coins that do contain 1 oz. of silver. Morgan dollars contained one dollar's worth of silver, about 0.77 troy ounces at the time. The coins' inscriptions indicate their value (ONE DOLLAR on the back) and not their silver weight. There's more information at the Related Question.
There is no difference. They are the same coin but many people refer to them as "Liberty Dollars".
All US silver dollars minted from 1794 to 1935 carried a picture of Miss Liberty. There were none with an Indian Head design.
The mint mark on all Morgan silver dollars is located on the reverse side of the coin just above the letters "DO" in the word "DOLLAR".
The mint mark (if it has one) on all Morgan (1878-1904 & 1921) silver dollars is on the reverse of the coin, just above the letters "DO" in dollar.
Both dates are very, very common. Circulated coins are valued at $38.00-$44.00.