answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

In 1861 the US minted $1 coins in both gold and silver. Please see the Related Questions for specific information about each one.

User Avatar

Wiki User

12y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What is the value of an 1861 US 1 dollar coin?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

What is the value of an 1857-1861 15th president old buck coin?

There's no US coin called an "old buck coin". What you have is a modern Presidential dollar worth face value only. The dates 1857-1861 are the years that James Buchanan served in office. The minting date 2010 is on the coin's edge.


What is the value of a US golden dollar coin?

a dollar


What the value of 1845 gold 5 dollar coin?

value of 1845 us five dollar coin


What is the value of year 2000 US dollar coin?

It's a common dollar coin that's face value


What is the value of an 1861 us 20 dollar gold piece?

An 1861 $20 dollar gold coin is extremely rare. In very good condition it is worth $10,000-$40,000. In "Uncirculated" with narrower wings (you will have to ask an expert on this) they can fetch up to $250,000.


What is the value of a 1976 us one dollar coin?

One dollar.


What is the value of a fifty dollar 1940 US gold coin?

There was no fifty dollar US gold coin produced in 1940.


What is the value of a 5 dollar gold coin 1861 C?

The value of an 1861C half eagle ($5 piece) is between $1,500 and $15,000. Condition greatly changes the value of the coin. You have a nice coin on your hands and I recommend sending to the NGC for certification. The value that I have found is according to the 2009 US coin digest (7th edition)


What is the value of a us two dollar coin?

Check that coin again. The U.S. has never minted a two dollar coin.


What is the value of a 2003 US dollar coin?

$1.00


Value of 2000 gold dollar coin US?

Approximately One dollar


What is the value of a 1756 dollar coin?

Check that coin again. There was no such thing as a US dollar (or the United States) in 1756.