"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.
These coins are privately minted and are intended as a collectible/commemorative/souvenir of the occasion and are not legal tender. These coins would be variously produced in a variety of metals including cupro-nickel, silver, gold and often, gold plated. The coins should come packaged and will contain a certificate or some other notation indicating where they were minted, what they are made from and the specifications of the coin.
Eisenhower dollar coins were struck in 1972, but no "Lady Liberty", matter of fact, no US coin is called a "Lady Liberty"
No US Dollar coins dated 1823 or any Silver Lady Head coins?
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.
If the coins are struck in cupro-nickel just a few pounds. If they are silver proofs then they will have a scrap value - weigh them. £14 an ounce for silver and a Troy Ounce is 31.1035 grammes.
60
30.00
Yes. All US half dollars minted before 1965 are 90% silver.
You have a 1981 British 25 Pence (Crown) coin minted to commemorate the Wedding of HRH the Prince of Wales to Lady Diana Spencer. The coins were made of 75% copper and 25% nickel, weigh 28.28 grams, are 38.61mm in diameter and 2.5mm thick and have a milled edge. The reverse design was done by Philip Nathan. There were 26.773 million minted and they are neither rare nor valuable.
No US dollar coins dated 1818
The silver and the nickel 3 cent coins minted in 1865 are 2 different coins and look different. The silver 3 cent coin minted in 1865 has a star on the obversed [heads] side of the coin and the reverse [tails] side has a large letter "C" with a Roman Numeral III [3] inside of it. This coin is smaller than a present day dime. The nickel 3 cent coin minted in 1865 has on the obverse [heads] side of the coin an image of Lady Liberty facing left while the reverse [tails] side of the coin has a large Roman Numeral III [3] surrounded by a wreath. This coin is the same size as todays dime.