Please check your coin again and post a new, separate question with its country of origin, and/or other information that might help to ID it. That inscription doesn't appear on US Coins.
A real 1796 or 1797 Draped Bust dollar has values from $1,300.00 to about $100,000.00 dependong on type and grade.
In circulated condition it has no extra value. It's brass, not silver, and was minted in 2007 as part of the Presidential Dollar series. 1789-1797 are the years Washington served as president.
Miss Liberty faces the right on a 1797 Draped Bust dollar.
The first Morgan dollar was coined in 1878, a US dollar coin dated 1797 is a Draped Bust dollar. If you actually have a dollar coin dated 1797, take it to a coin dealer for an accurate assessment.
If the coin is gold-colored it's made of brass, not silver, and not gold. It's part of the Presidential Dollar series and it's only worth face value in circulated condition. Uncirculated, it might sell for $3.
A real 1796 or 1797 Draped Bust dollar has values from $1,300.00 to about $100,000.00 dependong on type and grade.
In circulated condition it has no extra value. It's brass, not silver, and was minted in 2007 as part of the Presidential Dollar series. 1789-1797 are the years Washington served as president.
In circulated condition it has no extra value. It's brass, not silver, and was minted in 2007 as part of the Presidential Dollar series. 1789-1797 are the years Washington served as president.
A US dollar coin dated 1797 is a Draped Bust dollar. If you actually have a dollar coin dated 1797, take it to a coin dealer for an accurate assessment. The coin is rare.
Miss Liberty faces the right on a 1797 Draped Bust dollar.
The first Morgan dollar was coined in 1878, a US dollar coin dated 1797 is a Draped Bust dollar. If you actually have a dollar coin dated 1797, take it to a coin dealer for an accurate assessment.
No. The 1797 coin would be 1 to 2 millimeters larger.
The easy thing to do is, in the search box on your home page type in 1797 U.S. silver dollars and click on images.
The easy thing to do is, in the search box on your home page type in 1797 U.S. silver dollars and click on images.
The "Heraldic Eagle" reverse was first used in 1798. An authentic 1797 DB dollar should have the "Small Eagle" reverse.
If the coin is gold-colored it's made of brass, not silver, and not gold. It's part of the Presidential Dollar series and it's only worth face value in circulated condition. Uncirculated, it might sell for $3.
One dollar.