Seated Liberty dollars were made from 1840-1873. A US dollar coin dated 1876-CC is a TRADE DOLLAR (1873-1885) and is marked as this on the reverse. This coin in average circulated condition has retail values of $220.00-$425.00 depending on the actual grade of the coin. Above average circulated coins have higher values, up to $3,600.00. For an accurate assessment of value the coin needs to be seen and graded. Values are a market average and only for coins in collectible condition, coins that are bent, corroded, scratched, used as jewelry or have been cleaned have far less value if any to a collector or dealer.
NOTE: The entire series of Trade Dollars is known to been counterfeited.
Seated Liberty dollars were made from 1840-1873. A US dollar coin dated 1876 is a TRADE DOLLAR (1873-1885) and is marked as this on the reverse. This coin in average circulated condition has retail values of $90.00-$225.00 depending on the actual grade of the coin. Above average circulated coins have higher values, up to $600.00
Please check again and post a new question. The Walking Liberty design was first used on half dollars minted from 1916 to 1947, and again on silver bullion "eagle" coins starting in 1986. The only US $1 coins minted in 1876 were seated-Liberty trade dollars.
About $12 in average condition. Coins with a "CC" mint mark on the back are worth a dollar or two more.
Please look at the date of the coin again. The 1876 issue Liberty Seated dime has no known variety's or types. Only 2 different mintmarks.
The US didn't make special quarters for the Centennial in 1876, so what you have is a standard Liberty Seated quarter. Please see the Related Question for values.The only special quarters were struck for the Bicentennial in 1976.
Seated Liberty dollars were made from 1840-1873. A US dollar coin dated 1876 is a TRADE DOLLAR (1873-1885) and is marked as this on the reverse. This coin in average circulated condition has retail values of $90.00-$225.00 depending on the actual grade of the coin. Above average circulated coins have higher values, up to $600.00
Please check again and post a new question. The Walking Liberty design was first used on half dollars minted from 1916 to 1947, and again on silver bullion "eagle" coins starting in 1986. The only US $1 coins minted in 1876 were seated-Liberty trade dollars.
About $12 in average condition. Coins with a "CC" mint mark on the back are worth a dollar or two more.
Please look at the date of the coin again. The 1876 issue Liberty Seated dime has no known variety's or types. Only 2 different mintmarks.
The US didn't make special quarters for the Centennial in 1876, so what you have is a standard Liberty Seated quarter. Please see the Related Question for values.The only special quarters were struck for the Bicentennial in 1976.
Assuming the coin is circulated and has no mintmark, the 1876 Liberty Seated Half dollar is a common date coin and most show a lot of wear. For an accurate assessment of value the coin needs to be seen and graded. In general retail values for low grade coins are $28.00-47.00, better grade are $60.00-$109.00 and coins showing almost no wear run from $220.00-$330.00. Values are a market average and only for coins in collectible condition, coins that are bent, corroded, scratched, used as jewelery or have been cleaned have far less value if any to a collector or dealer
No Trade Dollars were struck in 1876. First year of issue was 1878
I don't believe there is a 1876 Morgan silver dollar. I believe in 1876 it was a For the silver content: ~$9 (12/30/08) Depending on condition: $500-$3000
$18 to $10,500 depending upon the mint mark and the condition of the coin.
Assuming the coin is circulated and has no mintmark, the 1876 Seated Liberty half dollar is a common date of the series. Most coins show heavy wear. For an accurate assessment of value the coin needs to be seen and graded. In general retail values for low grade coins are $25.00-$45.00, better grade are $60.00-$110.00 and coins showing almost no wear run from $220.00-$330.00. Values are a market average and only for coins in collectible condition, coins that are bent, corroded, scratched, used as jewelery or have been cleaned have far less value if any to a collector or dealer.
Look at the coin again the date is 1776-1976 and has no silver in it and is still only a dollar.
If you've got a bronze trade dollar coin, it is a fake. Real trade dollars were made out of silver, not bronze.