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its fake o silver dollars were made in 1799
Morgan silver dollars were not made in 1799. Check the date and post a new question.
It depends on what counterfeit it was. If it was a contemporary counterfeit (as in, it was made in 1799 or early 1800s to try to pass it off at face value) it might be worth a bit of money. If it is a modern replica, it depends on what it is made out of. If it isn't made out of silver, it is pretty much worthless, however, if it is silver, it is worth whatever the weight of silver it contains.
The last true silver dollars were made in 1935. That year marked the end of 90% silver dollars. The next silver dollars were made in 1971. These were Eisenhower dollars. They are not made of silver but rather of copper and nickel.
Trade dollars wee not made in 1799. Check your date again and post a new question.
its fake o silver dollars were made in 1799
Morgan silver dollars were not made in 1799. Check the date and post a new question.
It depends on what counterfeit it was. If it was a contemporary counterfeit (as in, it was made in 1799 or early 1800s to try to pass it off at face value) it might be worth a bit of money. If it is a modern replica, it depends on what it is made out of. If it isn't made out of silver, it is pretty much worthless, however, if it is silver, it is worth whatever the weight of silver it contains.
It's worth little to nothing. Being that it's a replica, it's not made of silver, and there's no collector value to it.
The last true silver dollars were made in 1935. That year marked the end of 90% silver dollars. The next silver dollars were made in 1971. These were Eisenhower dollars. They are not made of silver but rather of copper and nickel.
Yes, Morgan dollars are made out of 90% silver.
If it is a replica, not much. The only value in replica currency is the materials it is made out of, for an example a silver seated liberty quarter replica would be worth no more than its silver content, regardless of what date it said on the coin because it is a replica.
It's certainly possible. If one was made, it should say "replica" on it, so it won't be confused for a real one.
Trade dollars wee not made in 1799. Check your date again and post a new question.
If you think it's an older replica made before 1973 and does not have "copy" on it, take it to a coin dealer.
Morgan Silver Dollars were struck in 1895
If it's genuine, it could retail for anywhere from $1000 to over $300,000 depending on its condition and variety.But before you pay off your mortgage, the market has been flooded with fake dollars and dollar-size coins over the last couple of decades to the point that there are more counterfeits than genuine coins. In addition there are legitimate "replica" dollars that have the word "COPY" somewhere in small letters, as required by law. Counterfeits of course won't, LOL! And finally, there are modern 1 oz. silver bullion pieces that carry the fake date 1799; these are worth roughly whatever the current price of silver is.Bottom line, you'd need to have the coin authenticated by someone who deals with early U.S. coinage.MoreIf you have a small coin slightly larger than a quarter, gold in color, with a portrait of a U.S. president on the front it's not gold OR silver, and it's not from 1799 - it's one of the new presidential dollars and it's made of brass.