$1. Gold plating adds no value to the coin and collectors view the coin as damaged. It is worth no more than face value.
The value of this would depend entirely upon the value of the metal it contains. {ie: silver, gold, silver plated over copper etc.}
First it's gold plated, but not by the mint. And it's a common Eisenhower dollar and value is what ever you can get.
The gold plated Bicentennial coins dual dated 1776-1976 were plated out side of the mint and not issued by the Us government they are novelty coins and have little or no collectible value.
$1.75 for the set.
It's worth one dollar.
The value of this would depend entirely upon the value of the metal it contains. {ie: silver, gold, silver plated over copper etc.}
First it's gold plated, but not by the mint. And it's a common Eisenhower dollar and value is what ever you can get.
The gold plated Bicentennial coins dual dated 1776-1976 were plated out side of the mint and not issued by the Us government they are novelty coins and have little or no collectible value.
Don't know what you have, but it's not a U.S. Mint dollar.
$1.75 for the set.
It's worth one dollar.
No U.S. One Dollar coins dated 1776 exist. The first U.S. silver dollar made is dated 1794. If the coin has a duel date of 1776/1976 it is a bicentennial Eisenhower dollar that contains no silver and is only face value.
No U.S. One Dollar coins dated 1776 exist. The first U.S. silver dollar made is dated 1794. If the coin has a duel date of 1776/1976 it is a bicentennial Eisenhower dollar that contains no silver and is only face value.
3752
The 1776-1976 dollar was an Eisenhower dollar and the silver version has a current value from $14 to $325 depending upon the condition of the coin.
That's a bicentennial dollar, and it's still worth one dollar.
Look at the coin again the date is 1776-1976 and has no silver in it and is still only a dollar.