Please look at the coin again and post new question. No U.S. coin dated 1873 has a Liberty Bell on it. And also include the denomination.
Because the liberty bell is an old historic coin that is worth about $8.00
There were no silver dollars minted in 1950. The Franklin half dollar has the Liberty Bell on the reverse, The "6" above the bell must have been added after the coin left the mint. The "6' reduces the value of the coin to the value of the silver in it.
With a date of 1873, the coin is NOT a Morgan dollar. The first Morgan was struck in 1878. 1873 was the last year issue for Liberty Seated dollars and the fist year issue for U.S. Trade dollars. Please look at the coin and post new question with more information.
The coin has no collectible value unless you find someone that wants it. But its still has some value just for the silver.
There's no such coin. The last Liberty Seated dollars were struck in 1873. The Morgan series started in 1878.
the worth value of the liberty dollar coin is worth 50cents.
Seated Liberty dollars were made from 1840-1873. A US dollar coin dated 1876 is a TRADE DOLLAR (1873-1885) and is marked as this on the reverse. This coin in average circulated condition has retail values of $90.00-$225.00 depending on the actual grade of the coin. Above average circulated coins have higher values, up to $600.00
As you can tell from looking below the bell, the coin is a half dollar. Also, if you check any history book you'll find that the Liberty Bell really does have a crack in it.
value depends on overall conditioon................
There were no silver dollars minted in 1950. The Franklin half dollar has the Liberty Bell on the reverse, The "6" above the bell must have been added after the coin left the mint. The "6' reduces the value of the coin to the value of the silver in it.
With a date of 1862 the coin is one of the Seated Liberty series (1840-1873) an would have values of $550.00 to $1,500.00 or more depending on the grade.
The value of a one-dollar coin featuring the Liberty Bell on the reverse typically refers to the Eisenhower dollar, minted from 1971 to 1978. While the coin's face value is one dollar, its market value can vary based on factors like condition, mint mark, and demand among collectors. Generally, common circulated examples may be worth just a little over their face value, while uncirculated or rare versions can be worth more.