It's an ordinary circulation coin, part of the Presidential Series. Four designs are being released each year, depicting the presidents in the order they served.
Note that the coins are NOT gold, they're brass, and hundreds of millions of each are being made. They will not be worth more than $1 any time in the foreseeable future.
The only exception would be if it's a proof coin in its mint packaging. Then it might retail for $1.50 to $2.00
The coin is not silver, it's made of a manganese-brass alloy just like the Sacagawea dollars. These are standard circulation coins minted as part of the Presidential series. About 300 million are being struck for each president, so they are only worth face value. Go ahead and spend it.
It's not gold, it's brass and only a dollar.
President Eisenhower
No president is on any silver dollar. With a date of 1841 the coin is of the Liberty Seated series that were made from 1840 to 1873.
President Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Eisenhower was on the last silver dollar. The US mint is now producing a series of dollar coins that will eventually picture every non-living ex-president. None of the coins contain any silver.
President Dwight D. Eisenhower
The first real person on a dollar coin was President Eisenhower in 1971. No silver dollar coins have portraits of real people.
There is no president on the only silver dollars intended for circulation. All the dollar coins containing silver for general circulation had an image of Liberty and were last minted in 1935. However, the Eisenhower dollar coin minted from 1971-1978 are the same size as the earlier silver dollar coins, but they ones intended for circulation contain absolutely no silver and should not be called silver dollars. These dollar coins minted from 1971-1978 contain a portrait of Dwight Eisenhower on them.
Viola Helms has written: 'The silver dollar'
Dwight D. Eisenhower was on the large dollar coin minted in the 1970s.
Dwight D. Eisenhower. The coin is actually made of copper-nickel, not silver.
Silver Dollar Tabor has written: 'Star of blood [life of Allen Hence Downen]' -- subject(s): Biography, Juvenile literature, Outlaws
Susan B. Anthony was on the 1979 one-dollar coin. It was not silver, but was designed to be a cheaper replacement for the one-dollar bill. It was rejected by the public.