It's not gold, it's brass and only a dollar.
In circulated condition it has no extra value. It's brass, not silver, and was minted in 2007 as part of the Presidential Dollar series. 1789-1797 are the years Washington served as president.
All of the business strikes of presidential dollar coins and othermodern one dollar coins are face value only. Unless it's proof or uncirculated in original packaging spend it.
The George Washington dollar coin was the first of the Presidential dollar series. It was minted in 2007.
In circulated condition it has no extra value. It's brass, not silver, and was minted in 2007 as part of the Presidential Dollar series. 1789-1797 are the years Washington served as president.
Washington is on the one dollar bill, quarters and the first Presidential 2007 dollar coin.
They're worth face value.
All of the business strikes of presidential dollar coins and other modern one dollar coins are face value only. Unless it's a proof or uncirculated coin in it's original Mint packaging spend it.
It's still worth one dollar.
A 2007 George Washington Presidential Dollar lacking the edge lettering is valued around $150-$800. A 2007 John Adams is around $800-$1250. A 2007 Thomas Jefferson is between $2000 and $8000. As with all coins it is difficult to determine value without knowing condition, as such prices may vary. An exceptionally perfect piece is often worth much more, but is extremely rare. All in all a Presidential Dollar with a plain edge is a great coin to have and definitely worth saving.
Those are the years George Washington was President, so what you have is a 2007 presidential dollar coin. It's worth one dollar.
What you have is a modern brass $1 coin issued as part of the Presidential Dollar series. If you found it in change it's only worth a dollar. The dates indicate the years that George Washington served as president. The coin's minting date is 2007 and is on the edge.
What you're describing is the Thomas Jefferson presidential dollar. Minted in 2007, it's worth exactly one dollar.