Dollar - the Statue of Liberty (Presidential dollars), an eagle (Sacajawea, 2000-2008), various Native American themes (2009-)
Half dollar: an eagle
Quarter: eagle, state symbols, or national monuments
Dime: torch, oak leaf, olive branch
Nickel: Monticello
Penny: Lincoln Memorial (up to 2008), Lincoln commemorative images (2009), Union shield (2010-)
a date
The back of Presidential dollars have the Statue of Liberty on the back.
The US has never made a one dollar coin with a "Lady" on the back. Miss Liberty appeared on the FRONT of all US dollar coins from 1794 to 1935.
The US was not a country back then so there were no 1634 US coins.
That depends on which dollar coin you mean, 4 different series are in circulation today.
a date
The back of Presidential dollars have the Statue of Liberty on the back.
The US has never made a one dollar coin with a "Lady" on the back. Miss Liberty appeared on the FRONT of all US dollar coins from 1794 to 1935.
The US was not a country back then so there were no 1634 US coins.
The current US penny coin features the Union Shield Crest on the back side of the coin. A banner with the words one cent goes over the shield.
That depends on which dollar coin you mean, 4 different series are in circulation today.
The US 5 cent coin (a nickel). That is his home- Monticello- on the back.
The Presidential Coat of Arms.
In 2000, Sacajawea was put on the back of the US Dollar coin, to honor her journey with Lewis and Clark across America. In 2007, the government began a program called the President $1 Coin. This is where they have put each of the presidents faces on the coin in the order that they became president. These coins are for collector use.
There is no American coin that features the first 39 presidents. The "Presidential $1 Coin Program" is a coin program where the US Mint mints $1 coins featuring the portrait of a single president. The program will have a coin for each US president. It was signed into law in 2005 and the program began minting coins in 2007 and will end in 2016 with Ronald Reagan being the last president depicted. US law prohibits a living president (current or otherwise) from appearing on coinage or paper currency.
US 1 Dollar
Its A coin bid so you can never know