The coin is a Eisenhower dollar and none of them released for circulation have silver. For 1971 & 1972 only, all S mint marked coins are 40% silver. Also if the coin is a high grade uncirculated example it may be worth up to $5.00.
The moon is on the back of all 1970s Eisenhower dollars. It was in recognition of the moon landing.
landing
He went back to the navy, and must have worked with NASA. AND FAUGT IN OTHER WARS
Only Michael Collins stayed back.
December 19, 1972
The moon is on the back of all 1970s Eisenhower dollars. It was in recognition of the moon landing.
??? Roosevelt is on the dime, not the dollar. If you have a large coin (about 38 mm in diameter) with a picture of an eagle landing on the moon on its back side, you have an EISENHOWER dollar. Assuming it's from circulation, it's made of copper-nickel, not silver, and is only worth face value.
FG stands for Frank Gasparro, who designed the back of the Eisenhower dollar. The coin, in circulated condition, is still worth one dollar.
One dollar.
If it is not a proof or a high-grade uncirculated coin, it is worth a dollar. You might have to pay a dealer $1.25-$1.50 for a circulated dollar coin, but don't expect him to buy yours. He already has bags full of them in the back room.
The reverse of the SBA dollar is more-or-less a smaller-scale version of the image on the back of the Eisenhower dollar: an eagle landing on the Moon.
No. All US dollar coins have the reverse side of the coin 180 degrees in rotation from the obverse side of the coin.
The 1972-S Proof Eisenhower Dollar has a current retail value of $6.50
Depends if the eagle on the back is upside down or not. If there is a die error, it could be worth anywhere from $50 to a few hundred. If there is no die error, it is worth 50 cents. As with any collectible, they are only worth what someone is willing to pay for them
If it's golden in color and has the Statue of Liberty on the back, it's a 2011 presidential dollar, worth one dollar.
The Bicentennial Half Dollar is worth from $2-5
If the back of your coin has a picture of an eagle landing on the moon and a very severe-looking woman on the front, it's called a Susan B. Anthony dollar. All of the ones you'll find in change are worth just a dollar. Anthony dollars were issued for circulation in 1979, 1980, and 1999 but were failures because they were almost identical in size and color to a quarter, as you noted.