As of 6 August 2015, it's worth $14.59. What you describe sounds like a silver round from a private company rather than a national mint, so there's generally no collector value beyond melt price.
Assuming you are referring to an 1886 Morgan Silver dollar the answer is no. But their is a 1986 Statue of Liberty Centennial silver dollar.
The coin is the 1986 Statue of Liberty Centennial dollar, it's 90% silver and 10% copper.
The coin is actually a "Statue of Liberty Centennial" silver dollar and is very common with a current retail value of $26.00.
He is asking about a 1980 LIBERTY Silver Eagle. It is a bullion coin that predates (and was privately minted) the American Silver Eagle (1986). The confusion comes from the reverse having the inscription βOne Silver Eagleβ which many know to be synonymous with βone silver Dollarβ. It is not legal tender and is worth its weight in silver and any premium you can squeeze out of a collector.
Dwight Eisenhower is on the Bicentennial (1776-1976) Silver Dollar.
1859 1959 silver centennal stamp
between 400 and 1200 dollars. This is a centennial coin authorized 1 dollar silver coin made from Nevada ore. There were approximately 2600 coins made for the celebration. The coin has a minuteman and an American soldier facing the Liberty bell on opposite sides and they are standing on clouds.
The Statue of Liberty Centennial silver dollar (KM#214) is worth about $13.50, regardless of mint-mark, assuming it has been kept in pristine condition. It is 90% silver, has 0.7736 troy ounces ASW ("Actual Silver Weight"), 38.1mm in diameter, and had a mintage of 723,635 in Philadelphia and 6,414,638 (proof condition) in San Francisco. (Note that silver is about $14.30 per troy ounce as of 11/29/07, so the "melt value" of the silver in the coin is about $11.06.)
The value is only for the silver, about $35.00
I assume you mean Canadian Centennial. If so, you would have to take the coin to a dealer or appraiser. Several different varieties of this coin were struck with values ranging from a few times face, up to over $700 . The only way to be sure is to have it examined in person.
No, but there are "Walking Liberty" American Silver Eagle coins.
The Walking Liberty silver 50-cent piece is composed of 90 percent silver, and 10 percent copper. It was in production from 1916 to 1947, and weighs 12.5 grams.