Most halves go for between $10-$20, depending on the condition of the coin. I have a small collection of halves I inherited from my father, and I am missing the year 1794. Would you be willing to sell you coin? (assuming your coin is in good condition). If so, then write me back.
Depends on the mint, but if it is P(no mint mark) then a circulated piece will be about $10. The rarest is probably Flowing Hair Halfs only made in 1794 and 1795
It is worth the price of silver, right now one troy once of silver is worth $27.35 but that changes daily or even hourly.
If the females parents both have dark brown hair and the males parents both have light brown hair, their is a 50/50 chance of having either colour hair. Although if that is not the case, the child could have blonde hair if one of the grandparents has blonde hair also, there is not a definite hair colour. It is all down to chance.
Yes. The color of a newborn's hair can be different (almost always lighter) than the eventual adult hair color.
There is 1 syllable in the word hair. :)
Depends on the mint, but if it is P(no mint mark) then a circulated piece will be about $10. The rarest is probably Flowing Hair Halfs only made in 1794 and 1795
Depends on the mint, but if it is P(no mint mark) then a circulated piece will be about $10. The rarest is probably Flowing Hair Halfs only made in 1794 and 1795
Dollars with "flowing hair" design were only struck in 1794 and 1795. Your coin is simply called a Peace dollar.
1794/5 Flowing hair silver/copper dollar
1794/5 Flowing hair silver/copper dollar. $10,000,000
1794/5 Flowing hair silver/copper dollar U.S.
1794/5 Flowing hair silver/copper dollar
I really hate to give you the bad news but silver dollar you have, if it were in near perfect condition would be worth as much as $500,000. A 1794 flowing hair dollar is valued at over $2,000,000. The hole drilled in yours makes it almost worthless.
balls
Flowing hair? I'm sorry it's a fake because they stopped making them in 1795
7-6-11>>> A Flowing Hair 1796 dollar is NOT authentic. That obverse design was only used in 1794 & 1795 but the Draped Bust obverse was also first issued in 1795. So a real 1796 should be a Draped Bust coin.
You need to be a lot more specific. There are coin catalogues of thousands of pages containing that sort of information.