From your description, this is a known privately made novelty piece. It is NOT an official U.S. Mint issued coin. A real silver dollar dated 1851 is a Liberty Seated dollar. The obverse of the coin has the Indian head design that is similar to the Indian cents of 1859 -1909. The reverse has the denomination of 1 dollar and the date within a wreath. It has no numismatic collectible value.
The immigrants who settled in Bosque County at Norse in 1851 were primarily from Norway. They were part of a wave of Norwegian immigrants who came to Texas seeking land and opportunities for farming and a better life in the mid-19th century.
In 1851, miners used basic hand tools such as picks, shovels, pans, and cradles for gold mining. They also used simple machines like sluice boxes and rockers to help separate gold from dirt and gravel. These tools required a lot of manual labor and were not as efficient as modern mining equipment.
Gold was discovered in Australia in 1851. This event triggered a gold rush that significantly impacted the country's economy and population.
First of all, Charles Darwin said he was not an atheist but an agnostic. He started out training to be a doctor, like his father; but he found the operations - in those days without anasthetic - too much to bear and left medical school. It was something of a tradition that failed doctors became priests and Darwin did study divinity before his trip on the Beagle which led to his discovery of evolution. Rather surprisingly, it wasn't the attacks by the Church on Darwin over his theory of evolution by natural selection, but the death of his daughter Annie in 1851 at the age of 10 that made him lose his Christian faith. He described the loss of faith as an ebbing away, rather than as a sudden change in belief.
Gold was discovered in Australia as early as the 1830s, but discoveries were kept secret because there was the concern that it would cause unrest among the convicts. However, when the gold rush began in California, there was a huge rush to the American goldfields, and many men were leaving Australia. In order to prevent this trend from continuing, the authorities offered a reward to the first person to find payable gold in Australia. Edward Hargraves had recently returned from the Californian goldfields, where he had not had any success in finding gold. He carefully studied the geology of the countryside around Bathurst and was certain that it had similar traits to that of the California goldfields. He went prospecting with the help of John Lister, a man who had already found gold in the region. Lister and his friend William Tom led Hargraves directly to where gold was found, at Summerhill Creek, at a site which Hargraves named "Ophir".
The U.S. only minted Seated Liberty dollars in 1851. If your coin has a Native American on it it may be either a privately-minted piece or a fantasy coin. Regardless, it would have to be inspected in person to be evaluated.
This a well-known fake dated 1851. The piece has no collectible value.
It's not worth anything, because it's a fake.
The 1851 Liberty Seated Dollar is valued from $10,000.00 to $45,000.00
It's not worth anything, because it's not a real silver dollar. The U.S. never minted that design. What you have is a novelty, it was made in China, and it doesn't contain any silver.
A real 1851 Seated Liberty Dollar is valued at $10,000.00 to $50,000.00
If it's a genuine 1851 Seated Liberty silver dollar, which was the lowest mintage year for that coin, it's easily worth $5,000 in extremely worn condition, and significantly higher in better condition.If your 1851 dollar has an Indian head on the front and says "1 DOLLAR 1851" on the back, then what you have is a Chinese-made novelty coin that's not worth anything
A genuine 1851 Seated Liberty silver dollar is a rare date, worth a few thousand dollars even in poor condition. If it's an 1851 Indian Head dollar, then what you have is a Chinese novelty coin, and it's not worth anything.
The 1851 Indian dollar is a well known novelty coin (technically not a counterfeit, as there was no genuine version in the first place). It was made in China, contains no silver, and isn't worth anything.
Nothing, because it's a fake.
6 denominations were in circulation and dated 1851: Dollar, Half dollar, Quarter, Dime, Half dime and the 3 cent piece.
If it's genuine, between $6000 and $30,000. But there are many counterfeits so any 1851 dollar should be taken to a professional for authentication. BTW, ALL $1 coins are legally required to have an eagle on the back so that's not a distinguishing characteristic.