It looks the same as any other Peace dollar.
If it's not crisp and looks pretty much like a new dollar, $2.00 to $3.00.
Buffalo nickels, like modern nickels, are made of 75% copper and 25% nickel, NOT silver. 1935 is a common date, worth a dollar or two in average condition and upwards of $25-30 if uncirculated. A 1935-D is worth a little more.
The 1922 date makes this coin a Peace dollar. Miss Liberty appears on the obverse of all coins of this series. Extreme wear is likely to make it look like a bald headed man. Value is just for the silver, about $15.00 as of today. A silver dollar with a bald man would imply an Eisenhower dollar, but those were all minted in the 1970s.
It is part of the normal design. Both the Peace Dollar and the Standing Liberty Quarter use the Latin U which looks like a V. It is not an error, it is simply a stylistic choice the designers made. Many, many, non-US coins (and other works of art and manuscripts) use it too.
If by "misprint" you're referring to the word TRVST, where the U looks like a V, it's supposed to look like that. 1922 is by far the most common date for Peace silver dollars, currently worth $18 for the silver (as of 22 April 2013).
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.
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.
The Silver Peace dollar was the silver dollar to come after the Morgan Silver Dollar (1878-1921). The Peace dollar was made from 1922-1935) It is composed of .900 silver. It is 90% silver and 10% copper. A Peace Dollar is a silver dollar struck by the US mint for circulation from 1921-1935. It features Liberty on the obverse with a radiate crown, the reverse shows a bald eagle perched on a rock with an olive branch and the rock in inscribed "PEACE". The coin was struck to commemorate the end of WWI. Coins were minted in 1921 (that year was the final year for the Morgan Dollar also), 1922, 1923, 1924, 1925, 1926, 1927, 1928, 1934, 1935. The 1921 issues are highly prized because they are struck in high relief and the 1928 (no mintmark) coins are considered to be the "key date" and sell for much higher than bullion pricing. Pieces struck in common years like 1923 and 1924 unless flawlessly uncirculated sell for bullion prices which at the time of writing range from around $22-29 or so.
If it's not crisp and looks pretty much like a new dollar, $2.00 to $3.00.
No 1964 US Peace dollars exist, All were melted
THERE WERE NO SILVER DOLLARS MINTED IN THE UNIITED STATES AT ALL WITH A 1920 DATE! IF SOMEONE IS SELLING YOU SOMETHING LIKE THIS DO NOT BELEIVE IT!
The best thing to do is type in Peace dollars on your browser and click on images.
What you are referring to is the 1924 Peace dollar. It is not misspelled! It simply uses the Latin alphabet where the "U" is the same character as the "V" today. Both the Peace dollar and the Standing Liberty looks like it says "In God we Trvst" but both coins use the Latin alphabet for stylistic reasons. It is not an error.A 1924 Peace dollar is a common coin, only worth silver scrap. At the moment it is worth about $23 or so in silver value.
If one existed it would likely be of the Peace dollar design but the US did NOT make any one dollar coins dated 1966.
On your browser type in " Peace Dollar " and click on images, this is the easy thing to do.
At current silver prices, the 1924 Peace dollar is worth around $20-30 depending on condition (the '24-S could be worth more). And the word "TRVST," spelled with the V, it's supposed to be like that.
Buffalo nickels, like modern nickels, are made of 75% copper and 25% nickel, NOT silver. 1935 is a common date, worth a dollar or two in average condition and upwards of $25-30 if uncirculated. A 1935-D is worth a little more.