The term, "sawmill dollar", comes from the people who worked in the sawmills of a century or more ago. It referred to the pay they received and not the actual money whether it be coin or currency. The work was hard and the days long and the dollar they were paid was hard earned. The term sawmill dollar reflected how hard it was to earn money in those times.
The 1891 Morgan Silver Dollar can be seen by using the link to a picture of this coin.
It doesn't look like anything because there's no such thing.
a llimwas reenoip :)
its a big huge coin that is silver. its basically a fifty cent worth .
For each year since 2009, they have been doing United States presidents on the gold colored dollar coin.
The 1851 Indian Head dollar is a well known novelty piece, so a real coin does not exist.
It looks the same as all the other Morgan dollars.
Take a dollar out of your wallet. It looks pretty much like that. If you mean the dollar coin, it was considerably larger than any modern US coin; the front had a profile of Eisenhower and the back was an eagle landing on the Moon.
Look at the back of the coin for "HALF DOLLAR" no US dollar coins were struck after 1935.
See the related link below for a picture.
Please look at the coin again, the US did not coin $25 dollar denominations in 1896.
Type the date and coin into your browser, click images then search and you will find what one looks like.