To clear things up, your coin is perfectly normal.
"A" is part of the monogram of the coin's designer, Anthony Di Francisci.
"TRVST" is spelled using the Roman alphabet rather than the English alphabet; in Latin the letter V was also a vowel.
Please see the Related Questions for more.
Any silver dollar that has a letter or number added to the coin reduces it to the silver value only, about $12.00
Uh, that would be MISSPELLED and the word TRVST is definitely not an error.Please see the Related Questions.
If by misspelled you mean that the U looks like a V, then it's supposed to look like that. It's a really common date for silver dollars, currently worth about $21 for the silver.
Roosevelt was not pictured on a silver dollar. He was on a dime. Your coin could be a privately minted coin. If so it's only worth it's base metal value. Silver base medals are worth the most.
The word "TRVST" is normal, the designer used classic Latin lettering for this series of coins. The Latin alphabet has no "U".
Any silver dollar that has a letter or number added to the coin reduces it to the silver value only, about $12.00
Uh, that would be MISSPELLED and the word TRVST is definitely not an error.Please see the Related Questions.
The monogram is the letter F over an A, all Peace dollars have this.
If by misspelled you mean that the U looks like a V, then it's supposed to look like that. It's a really common date for silver dollars, currently worth about $21 for the silver.
8-24-11>> The coin is NOT an Liberty silver dollar, it's a PEACE dollar (1921-1935) and all them have TRVST spelled like this. It's just part of the design.
The word trust is not misspelled. The Peace dollar and the standing liberty quarter both use the Latin spelling of trust as TRVST. 1925 is a common date for the peace dollar, and unless in uncirculated condition, it is worth anywhere from $25-35.
Circulated coins are valued at $14.00-$19.00
What you are referring to is the 1924 Peace dollar. It is not misspelled! It simply uses the Latin alphabet where the "U" is the same character as the "V" today. Both the Peace dollar and the Standing Liberty looks like it says "In God we Trvst" but both coins use the Latin alphabet for stylistic reasons. It is not an error.A 1924 Peace dollar is a common coin, only worth silver scrap. At the moment it is worth about $23 or so in silver value.
Roosevelt was not pictured on a silver dollar. He was on a dime. Your coin could be a privately minted coin. If so it's only worth it's base metal value. Silver base medals are worth the most.
That depends on the supposed misspelling. If the U looks like a V, that's actually correct.
TRVST is NOT a misspelling. Please see the Related Questions for more information.
8-24-11>> The coin is NOT an Liberty silver dollar, it's a PEACE dollar (1921-1935) and all them have TRVST spelled like this. It's just part of the design.