Their are real 1847 1 cent Hawaiian coins but this is not one of them. No gold 1 cent coins have ever been struck. It's likely a gold plated replica and has no collectible value.
There was never a gold half penny issued by the U.S. Mint.
The US NEVER made any gold 1 cent coins
It's not an official US Mint coin. Depending on what company made it and whether it's really gold, its value would be determined by the gold content and condition of the dollar.
Its value is based only on the value of the metals it contains. A plated coin has no true numismatic value.
The US has never made a gold penny (or cent). Your coin has either been plated (maybe with gold, maybe it's a gold-colored bronze) or it has been affected by some chemical. Either way, it is worth one cent.
There was never a gold half penny issued by the U.S. Mint.
1 cent. It's plated. The US has never made a gold penny.
no such coin
No such thing.
Modified coins have no collector value.
Sorry! It's worth a penny. It's only gold plated which doesn't add any value to the coin.
My guess would be that it was plated with gold (or a gold-colored metal) after minting, and that it is thus worth about a penny.
The US NEVER made any gold 1 cent coins
Not much. Modified coins have no collector value.
No Australian Penny has ever been minted in gold, they were made from bronze. If you have a gold Penny, it will be because somebody has gold plated it, perhaps to commemorate or celebrate a significant event for somebody. Modified coins have no collector value.
The face value is the original value of the coin, so a very rare penny might be worth £100 but it's face vale is still a penny.
I have 14 carot gold jewelry that weighs in at 9.6 pennyweight. How many ounces of gold is that? How much is the current market value for gold is that amount worth?