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Can you? Yes. Should you? Probably not - you'll remove toning (which many collectors like) and likely scratch the coin's surface.
The 1891 Morgan Silver Dollar can be seen by using the link to a picture of this coin.
its a big huge coin that is silver. its basically a fifty cent worth .
In your search box of your home page type in 1880 silver dollar an click on images. This will bring up many pictures.
Sounds like a U.S. Morgan silver dollar. In circulated condition, it's worth $7-$10 Also please note that ALL U.S. coins bear the motto "E Pluribus Unum" ("From many, one") so this is not a distinguishing characteristic of a coin. The denomination, date, mint mark, and condition are the most helpful characteristics to start with.
Trade dollars were US coins made in silver to trade in the far East. However, your coin, if it is an 1884 Trade Dollar, it is counterfeit. There were only 10 examples minted that year, all of them are known. So, when it comes to value, the only value your coin can have is if it is minted in real silver, if it is minted in real silver, it is worth however much silver is in your coin. If it is silver plated lead, or silver plated copper, or non-silver alloy like "nickel silver" your coin is essentially worthless.
Can you? Yes. Should you? Probably not - you'll remove toning (which many collectors like) and likely scratch the coin's surface.
The 1891 Morgan Silver Dollar can be seen by using the link to a picture of this coin.
It looks like the coin in the related link:
its a big huge coin that is silver. its basically a fifty cent worth .
Please post a new and clearer question. A 50¢ coin is a HALF dollar. A silver dollar, like all dollars, is 100 cents.
In your search box of your home page type in 1880 silver dollar an click on images. This will bring up many pictures.
Depends, there is no coin minted by the US Mint with the Dallas Cowboys on it so its not going to be a collectible to coin collectors. But, your coin may be made out of real silver and so it would be worth the metallic value. Of course, if your coin is something like silver plated copper it is only worth a few cents, but if its silver dollar sized and made out of pure or sterling silver it is worth nearly $20 in silver scrap.
The coin is one of the Seated Liberty dollars that were made from 1840 to 1873.
Sounds like a U.S. Morgan silver dollar. In circulated condition, it's worth $7-$10 Also please note that ALL U.S. coins bear the motto "E Pluribus Unum" ("From many, one") so this is not a distinguishing characteristic of a coin. The denomination, date, mint mark, and condition are the most helpful characteristics to start with.
8-24-11>> The coin is NOT an Liberty silver dollar, it's a PEACE dollar (1921-1935) and all them have TRVST spelled like this. It's just part of the design.
1923 is a common date Peace dollar struck in silver not gold, it's possible the coin has toned a gold like color and values for circulated coins are $14.00-$19.00. If the coin has been gold plated the value is just for the silver and is about $13.00