Assuming the coin is circulated and has no mintmark, the 1886 Morgan (Not Lady Liberty) dollar is common. The retail values are $32.00-$39.00 depending on condition. Values are a market average and only for coins in collectible condition, coins that are bent, corroded, scratched, used as jewelery or have been cleaned have far less value if any to a collector or dealer.
Uh, the "Liberty woman" is Miss Liberty, as in "Statue of ..." Please see the Related Question for more information.
Please post new question with more information and a better description. Is the dual date 1886-1986 on both coins?
Hi I have also been trying to find the value of these coins because I have a 1986 Liberty Trade Silver coin. Ive done the research and these coins were privately manufactured so they are really only worth the silver value of these coins, and the print on them does not contribute at all to their value.
The 1986 Statue of Liberty Centennial half dollar is a copper-nickel clad coin. Current retail value is $4.00.
The 1886 Morgan Dollar is very common. The values for average circulated coins are $38.00 to $44.00 retail
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.
Uh, the "Liberty woman" is Miss Liberty, as in "Statue of ..." Please see the Related Question for more information.
Please post new question with more information and a better description. Is the dual date 1886-1986 on both coins?
Hi I have also been trying to find the value of these coins because I have a 1986 Liberty Trade Silver coin. Ive done the research and these coins were privately manufactured so they are really only worth the silver value of these coins, and the print on them does not contribute at all to their value.
In condition order: 25,35,115,750
In condition order: 25,35,115,750
The 1986 Statue of Liberty Centennial half dollar is a copper-nickel clad coin. Current retail value is $4.00.
The 1886 Morgan Dollar is very common. The values for average circulated coins are $38.00 to $44.00 retail
The first US $2 silver certificates were printed in 1886
$9 to $415 depending upon the condition of the coin.
Assuming the coin is circulated and has no mintmark, the 1886 Morgan (Not Liberty)dollar is common. The retail values are $30.00-$39.00 depending on condition. Values are a market average and only for coins in collectible condition, coins that are bent, corroded, scratched, used as jewelery or have been cleaned have far less value if any to a collector or dealer.
The 1886 Morgan is a high mintage, more common date coin. A MS-63 example has a average retail value of $60.00.