"Lady of the Century" coins were minted by a large variety of countries, in a number of different years.
The have been variously minted in 24 carat and 22 carat gold, pure silver, sterling silver and 50% silver.
No US Dollar coins dated 1823 or any Silver Lady Head coins?
No US dollar coins dated 1818
Eisenhower dollar coins were struck in 1972, but no "Lady Liberty", matter of fact, no US coin is called a "Lady Liberty"
1897 is a common date for Morgan Silver Dollars, circulated coins are valued at $17.00-$26.00
Zero. There is no silver in any British general circulation coin. The Proof in silver FDC issue of the same coin is made from sterling silver (92.5%), but this is reflected in the price you pay for them.
First, no US coin of any type is referred to as a "Lady Liberty coin", but the symbolic portrait of Lady Liberty is on most older US coins such as the Morgan Dollar series. So the Morgan and the lady liberty are the same coin.
It's a Morgan Dollar not a lady liberty and is also very common with retail values of $17.00-$26.00 for circulated coins depending on grade.
Look at the coin again and post new question. No U.S. dollar coins dated 1890 with a 'Walking Lady & Flowing Hair' exist.
1881 is a common date for Morgan dollars, circulated coins are valued at $17.00-$26.00
When the Philadelphia Mint began producing coins in 1793, George Washington was still in office, and there was a preference against featuring living people on coins. Through the entire 19th Century, all U.S. coins featured variations of Lady Liberty.
£5 coins are made by the royal mint and unless there loder than decimilisation in 1971 there only worth £5 sterling.
The coins is a Three (3) Cent-Piece. They were struck from 1865-1889 but the coin is not silver. It's copper-nickel.