Face value only, unless the coin is uncirculated or proof. In that case it might retail for $3 or $4.
"FG" is on all Eisenhower dollars because it's the monogram of Frank Gasparro who designed the coin. If you look at a Lincoln Memorial cent, you'll see his initials to the right of the building because he also designed its reverse.
The 1972-S Proof Eisenhower Dollar has a current retail value of $6.50
FG stands for Frank Gasparro, who designed the back of the Eisenhower dollar. The coin, in circulated condition, is still worth one dollar.
Eisenhower dollar coins were not struck until 1971, if you look at the back of the coin you will see the words HALF DOLLAR. The coin is a Franklin Half dollar and is valued at $4.50
This is a Eisenhower dollar. None of them regardless of date or mintmark, struck for general circulation have any silver and most are not more than face value. For coins dated 1971 & 1972 uncirculated examples may have a little more value due to the fact dollar coins were not included in Uncirculated Mint sets sold in 1971 & 1972. In general, only proof and uncirculated collectors coins sold from the Mint have premiums.
??? Roosevelt is on the dime, not the dollar. If you have a large coin (about 38 mm in diameter) with a picture of an eagle landing on the moon on its back side, you have an EISENHOWER dollar. Assuming it's from circulation, it's made of copper-nickel, not silver, and is only worth face value.
The 1972-S Proof Eisenhower Dollar has a current retail value of $6.50
FG stands for Frank Gasparro, who designed the back of the Eisenhower dollar. The coin, in circulated condition, is still worth one dollar.
Eisenhower dollar coins were not struck until 1971, if you look at the back of the coin you will see the words HALF DOLLAR. The coin is a Franklin Half dollar and is valued at $4.50
Uh, JFK has been on the half dollar since 1964 and President Eisenhower was on dollars struck from 1971 to 1978. In either case your coins are cupro-nickel issues worth face value only.
This is a Eisenhower dollar. None of them regardless of date or mintmark, struck for general circulation have any silver and most are not more than face value. For coins dated 1971 & 1972 uncirculated examples may have a little more value due to the fact dollar coins were not included in Uncirculated Mint sets sold in 1971 & 1972. In general, only proof and uncirculated collectors coins sold from the Mint have premiums.
??? Roosevelt is on the dime, not the dollar. If you have a large coin (about 38 mm in diameter) with a picture of an eagle landing on the moon on its back side, you have an EISENHOWER dollar. Assuming it's from circulation, it's made of copper-nickel, not silver, and is only worth face value.
The average retail value is $15.00, a cameo surface is only found on "S" mintmark Proof coins.
The reverse of the SBA dollar is more-or-less a smaller-scale version of the image on the back of the Eisenhower dollar: an eagle landing on the Moon.
A 180 degree rotation between front and back is normal for US coins.
The moon is on the back of all 1970s Eisenhower dollars. It was in recognition of the moon landing.
Please turn the coin over and look at the denomination on the back. It's a HALF dollar, not a dollar. All 1971 and later halves are made of cupronickel like dimes and quarters, so it's only worth face value. If you want to "cash in" your coin you can spend it or take it to a bank.
There's no such coin. LBJ has never been on a circulating US dollar or any other denomination. Please check the denomination on the back. If your coin is a $1 piece the president shown is Dwight Eisenhower. If it's a half dollar, the president shown is John Kennedy.