Although the word LIBERTY appears on all US Coins its not used to identify any coin. A denomination is needed. Please post new question.
Of the 4 US coins that are dated 1799 all have Liberty on them a denomination would help.
Of the 4 U.S. coins that are dated 1799 all have the word "LIBERTY" on them, a denomination is needed. Post new question.
its fake o silver dollars were made in 1799
August 13, 2009 The only silver coin produced by the US Mint in 1799 was the silver dollar. Although it had no denomination on it, the word "LIBERTY" was on the obverse side of the coin. If your coin has no "Liberty", then it is worn so much the word has been rubbed off or it is not a US coin. If it is worn badly then the value would probably be about $600. If it is not worn then, probably, it is not a US coin.
With 6 major variety's of the 1799 dollar, retail values run from $1,000.00 to over $18,000.00 for genuine circulated coins depending on the grade.
Of the 4 US coins that are dated 1799 all have Liberty on them a denomination would help.
Of the 4 U.S. coins that are dated 1799 all have the word "LIBERTY" on them, a denomination is needed. Post new question.
its fake o silver dollars were made in 1799
August 13, 2009 The only silver coin produced by the US Mint in 1799 was the silver dollar. Although it had no denomination on it, the word "LIBERTY" was on the obverse side of the coin. If your coin has no "Liberty", then it is worn so much the word has been rubbed off or it is not a US coin. If it is worn badly then the value would probably be about $600. If it is not worn then, probably, it is not a US coin.
With 6 major variety's of the 1799 dollar, retail values run from $1,000.00 to over $18,000.00 for genuine circulated coins depending on the grade.
That could describe any of nearly a dozen US and private coins from that year. Please post a new question with the coin's denomination.
You also need to provide the coin's denomination to determine its value. Please post a new question with that information - thanks.
It's not really from 1799. The "one troy ounce" is a giveaway that it's a modern bullion coin, worth slightly more than whatever the current spot price of silver is.
The coin is a worthless counterfeit. The United States issued Trade Dollars between the years of 1873 and 1885.
The value of a 1799 coin depends on the coin's denomination such as dime or quarter. It also depends on what country the coin came from, where it was minted and the condition of the coin. Without that information, it is impossible to state a value.
4-22-11>> The only US coin dated 1997 with the Walking Liberty design is a Silver Eagle Bullion coin. The value of the coin is tied to the spot price of silver at time of sale, today it's $46.61 per ounce.
The only U.S. coin dated 1799 in the weight range, is a $10 gold eagle at 17.50 grams.