There's no way to know unless you can determine who manufactured it. Replica coins are made by private companies and by law have to display the word COPY somewhere in the design, but they don't have to have a manufacturing date.
Also note that coins aren't printed. They're struck or minted. When dealing with money, printing refers only to paper bills.
A US Trade Dollar dated 1795 is a fake, they were struck from 1873-1885
Why is 1873 worth less than 1874 in the same condition?
No such (genuine) coin exists, the first US trade dollar was struck in 1873.
If you have a 'Trade Dollar' dated 1799 it's fake. 1873 is the first year of issue.
The first trade dollars were minted in 1873. If your coin has that date on the front and the words TRADE DOLLAR and 420 GRAINS 900 FINE on the back, it's a counterfeit (replica coin). It should have been plainly marked with the stamp "COPY." If it has a spread-winged eagle and the abbreviation ONE DOL. on the back, it's a Liberty Seated dollar, not a trade dollar. In that case please see the Related Question for more details.
A US Trade Dollar dated 1795 is a fake, they were struck from 1873-1885
Why is 1873 worth less than 1874 in the same condition?
The first Trade Dollars are dated 1873. If this coin is a Trade Dollar dated 1798 it's counterfeit.
The first Trade Dollars are dated 1873. If this coin is a Trade Dollar dated 1798 it's counterfeit.
No such (genuine) coin exists, the first US trade dollar was struck in 1873.
If you have a 'Trade Dollar' dated 1799 it's fake. 1873 is the first year of issue.
The first trade dollars were minted in 1873. If your coin has that date on the front and the words TRADE DOLLAR and 420 GRAINS 900 FINE on the back, it's a counterfeit (replica coin). It should have been plainly marked with the stamp "COPY." If it has a spread-winged eagle and the abbreviation ONE DOL. on the back, it's a Liberty Seated dollar, not a trade dollar. In that case please see the Related Question for more details.
You need to look at the coin again. The first US Trade Dollar was issued in 1873. None of them ever had a P mint mark. You very likely have a copy of an 1873 "pattern coin" produced with an 1872 date and any of three "Trade Dollar" reverses. You may be seeing the P of the word COPY that is required to be stamped into the reverse side of the coin. Most of these coins contain no silver or other valuable metals, and are cheaply and readily purchased as replica coins.
No.Trade Dollars were not minted until 1873.
The first US Trade Dollar was issued in 1873 and the United States did not exist in 1704.
Check that coin again. The first trade dollars were minted in 1873.
Trade dollars were only made from 1873 to 1875 and have the words TRADE DOLLAR in large letters on the back. Anything else is a fantasy piece or a counterfeit.