A Barber Quarter weighs 6.25 grams and is 90% silver. This equates to Actual Silver Weight (or "ASW") of 0.1818 troy ounces. As of December 5, 2008 (with silver at $9.48/troy ounce), that is a "melt value" of about $1.72. Depending on condition, however, the numismatic value (that is, the value to a collector) is likely quite a bit higher.
The 1911 US Barber dime is a common coin. A coin in average condition is $2.00-$5.00
The Barber's Daughter - 1911 was released on: USA: 7 March 1911
Assuming it's circulated and has no mintmark, the 1911 US Barber dime is a common coin. A coin in average condition is $3.00-$5.00.
Sorry no US dollar coins dated 1911 but there is a Barber Half dollar with that date.
How much is a 1911 quarter worth
The Italian Barber was created on 1911-01-09.
Means that it was minted in Philadelphia and if well circulated it is worth about $2.15 for scrap silver and more if in better condition.
The first Mercury design dimes were made in 1916. If your dime is dated 1911 it's a Barber dime, named for its engraver Charles Barber. See the Related Question for more information.
Sacrifice of Silver Cloud - 1911 was released on: USA: 17 March 1911
Silver Tail and His Squaw - 1911 was released on: USA: 2 September 1911
The 1911 US Barber dime is a common coin. A coin in average condition is $2.00-$5.00
While what you have is technically a liberty half-dollar, most coin collectors refer to these as Barber half-dollars, named after their designer, Charles Barber, and reserve the name of liberty half-dollars for the Walking Liberty series (1916-1947). When it comes to collecting Barber coins, condition is incredibly important. If you can make out all the letters in "LIBERTY" on the headband or most of them, the coin is generally in at least extra-fine condition and depending on condition goes for around $20-70+, however, if the coin is well worn and circulated, with high silver prices, it is worth $10 for the silver content.