As far at the 20th Century, there were no silver dollars minted 1905-20, 1929-33, and 1936-1970. The Eisenhower dollar was minted 1971-78, but it was mostly copper instead of silver. Following that was the Susan B. Anthony dollar, which was much smaller, also made of copper/nickel instead of silver, minted 1979-81 and 1999.
United States silver Peace Dollars were minted from 1921 through 1935.
walker half dollars were minted from 1916 to 1947. they were always made of 90% silver
The Carson City, Nevada mint produced Morgan Silver Dollars during the following years 1878,1879,1880,1881,1882,1883,1884,1885,1889,1890,1891,1892,1893.
10-20 years for counterfeiting. No US silver dollars were minted 1929-1933.
1794-current Probably the most popular dollar, was the Morgan Dollar. Morgan Dollars were minted from 1878-1904 & again in 1921. Hope that helps you!
United States silver Peace Dollars were minted from 1921 through 1935.
walker half dollars were minted from 1916 to 1947. they were always made of 90% silver
The Carson City, Nevada mint produced Morgan Silver Dollars during the following years 1878,1879,1880,1881,1882,1883,1884,1885,1889,1890,1891,1892,1893.
10-20 years for counterfeiting. No US silver dollars were minted 1929-1933.
1794-current Probably the most popular dollar, was the Morgan Dollar. Morgan Dollars were minted from 1878-1904 & again in 1921. Hope that helps you!
None, because there's no such thing. There were no US silver dollars minted during the years 1905-1920.
1964 was the only year for a 90% silver Kennedy, 1965 to 1970 are 40% silver.
Please post a new question with the coin's date. Carson City minted silver dollars for about 20 years.
In 1885 the US mint at Carson City, Nevada struck 228,000 silver Morgan Dollars. Dollars were the only coins being struck at Carson City in 1885 although dimes, quarters and half dollars had been minted there in prior years.
The New Orleans Mint struck Morgans from 1879-1904. None were struck in 1878 & 1921
The cutoff date for U.S. dimes and quarters is 1965, and 1971 for half dollars. All coins (in the listed denominations) minted before those years contain silver. Then U.S nickels dated 1942-1945 contain a little silver as well. For Canadian quarters, halves, and dollars, those contained silver until 1967 (1968 for dimes).
The term "silver dollar" is often mistakenly used for any $1 coin, but in fact true silver dollars haven't been minted for almost 80 years, at least in the US. American silver dollars were minted from 1794 to 1935, with many gaps. All of these coins were made of 90% silver and 10% copper.No new US $1 coins were made for circulation until 1971, and none of these contain silver except as noted below. Eisenhower and SBA dollars were struck in copper-nickel clad alloy while modern Sacajawea and Presidential dollars are made of brass.Note - Some Eisenhower dollars were struck in 40% clad silver and sold in special collectors' sets, but these coins weren't intended for circulation. In addition, an experimental run of 90% silver dollars was made in 1964 but the coins were never released to the public.