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Please check the date. There were 1776-1976 halves but none dated 1776-1975.
The dual dated Eisenhower dollars are face value only.
Dual dated (1776-1976) Eisenhower dollars are so very common, coins that were struck for general circulation have 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.
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.
$100
Please check the date. There were 1776-1976 halves but none dated 1776-1975.
The dual dated Eisenhower dollars are face value only.
Dual dated (1776-1976) Eisenhower dollars are so very common, coins that were struck for general circulation have only face value.
The name is Carolus- Spanish for Charles. Value will depend on condition, and we can't judge that over the internet, You need to take the coin to a coin dealer. IF it is original, value can vary from about $50-$350. HOWEVER- there is a modern Chinese reproduction that is a copper cored coin, worth about a 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.
Sorry, no US coins dated 1776 with a Twenty D. denomination were struck. 1793 is the first year for ANY US coin.
The bicentennial quarter is extremely common, still worth 25 cents.
It's a common coin, still worth one dollar.
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.
Richard Henry Lee