Please look at the coin again, The US no longer makes $1.00 gold coins.
CorrectionThe coin is brass, not gold. It's a Sacajawea dollar and shows a stylized picture of that Native American guide, not the Statue of Liberty. The Statue of Liberty appears on the reverse side of Presidential-series $1 coins minted since 2007.That's NOT the Statue of Liberty, because the statue wasn't built until 1886. What you have is a Morgan silver dollar. If the date is so worn that you can't determine the last number, then based on that condition, the coin's value is only for the silver content. As of 23 January 2013, it's worth about $25.
I think the 1st. silver dollar was made in 1794.
It's the "Flowing Hair" dollar.
You sure about the date?
You sure it's a U.S. minted Silver dollar?
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.
It is a stylized portrait of Miss Liberty. Compare to the face of the Statue of Liberty.
Uh, the "girl" is Miss Liberty - as in "Statue of..." !!
The coin is the 1986 Statue of Liberty Centennial dollar, it's 90% silver and 10% copper.
No, but there are "Walking Liberty" American Silver Eagle coins.
The coin is 90% silver and 10% copper.
9.61
Uh, the "Liberty woman" is Miss Liberty, as in "Statue of ..." Please see the Related Question for more information.
All silver dollars issued from 1794 to 1935 carry a picture of Miss Liberty, as in "Statue of ..."
The coin is actually a "Statue of Liberty Centennial" silver dollar and is very common with a current retail value of $26.00.
Current average retail value is $29.00
If you go by the strict definition of "Liberty dollar" (i.e. a silver dollar made from 1794 to 1935) the answer is yes - these coins are 90% silver and 10% copper. But many people mistakenly call newer $1 coins "Liberty dollars" because they either have the word Liberty or a picture of the Statue of Liberty on them. These coins are either copper-nickel or brass, but not silver.