There were several gold coins issued to commemorate King Edward VII's coronation in 1902. The £5, £2 and sovereign. The £5 can be worth between £700 and £1500 depending on condition. The £2 coin fetches between £350 and £800 and the sovereign (£1 coin) can fetch between £180 - £500 (check the Mint location for other Edward VII dates i.e. Melbourne, Perth, Sydney or Ottawa....Ottawa coins are very rare). The mint location's initials are on the ground just above the date. Half sovereigns were also struck in 1902 and can be worth £90 - £100 at today's gold prices ($1270 an ounce - £818 an ounce) (September 2010)
A coin collector is going to buy my coin , I want to know what the value of this coin, it is a 1953 gold coin ,50 franks
10.00
340.00
I'm assuming you mean the Sacajawea Dollar which is minted in gold-coloured brass (Susan B Anthony dollars were last minted in 1999) it is a common coin struck in brass and not gold and is worth $1.
It isn't silver, it isn't gold. All Susan B Anthony coins are copper-nickel, someone might have added gold plating to the coin which doesn't do anything to increase the value and is viewed as damage to the coin by collectors. Your coin is only worth $1.
There were no British Ten Pound gold coins minted in 1902, or any other year prior to decimal currency.
Without knowing more about the coin it's impossible to give a value. Most importantly, be sure that it's really brass and not gold! Brass wasn't a common coinage metal in 1902. If it's a true gold coin its value could be significant.
You need to provide the denomination and any mintmark present on the coin. Values differ greatly between something like a 1902 penny and a 1902 gold double eagle.
The Halfcrown is a silver coin. If you have a gold coin it is because somebody plated it. Modified coins have no collector value.
There were no British gold coins minted in 1939, and, if there were, they would have King George VI on them. There were no Queens from 1902 to 1952.
The first gold Fifty Pound coin issued by the Royal Mint was in 1987.
No. The British gold Guinea coin was a coin with a value of 21 Shillings and was 24mm in diameter. The Guinea was last issued in 1813 and was effectively replaced by the Sovereign. The British 22 carat gold Sovereign coin is a coin with a face value of One Pound (or 20 Shillings) and is 22.05mm in diameter. The modern Sovereign was first issued in 1817.
All British gold coins are 22 carat. There were four denominations of gold coin minted in 1902 being Five Pound, Two Pound, Sovereign and Half-Sovereign, all identical except for diameter. Please provide the diameter.
A US 1902 Liberty Head Half-Eagle with or without a mintmark (only an "S") is nothing special, circulated coins are $400.00-$490.00.
About $1,000 for its gold content.
Such a coin does not exist. In the event that somebody did produce a gold Halfpenny, it would be worth whatever the current bullion value of gold is.
A British Half-Sovereign has a face value of 50 Pence. They are made from 22 carat gold and, since 1980 have been issued as a collector or investment coin issued as either or Proof or bullion coin, or both, their actual value, depending on the year, is more likely to be anything from £140 to £200 GBP. See the link below for a currency conversion.