If the spoon is sterling or pure silver it should be marked as so. Also a manufacturer mark should be on the spoon. A silver spoon could be worth $5 in metal alone. Now add that it is a spoon, has a theme and depending on the manufacturer and craftsmanship the price is going up. Also just in case it could be folk art and is a hand made one time piece of craft without a mark of any sort the price could go up. My guess is that a tourist plated piece could go for $15. Silver could go for $20 to $50 and folk art however much someone is willing to pay.
All silver dollars issued from 1794 to 1935 carry a picture of Miss Liberty, as in "Statue of ..."
Assuming you are referring to an 1886 Morgan Silver dollar the answer is no. But their is a 1986 Statue of Liberty Centennial silver dollar.
Statue of Liberty.
If you go by the strict definition of "Liberty dollar" (i.e. a silver dollar made from 1794 to 1935) the answer is yes - these coins are 90% silver and 10% copper. But many people mistakenly call newer $1 coins "Liberty dollars" because they either have the word Liberty or a picture of the Statue of Liberty on them. These coins are either copper-nickel or brass, but not silver.
golden
It is a stylized portrait of Miss Liberty. Compare to the face of the Statue of Liberty.
No. There is no wall around her. Look at a picture of her.
yes Go on google and go on images and look up "statue of liberty"
The picture of Miss Liberty on the coin is similar to the image used on the Statue of Liberty but the coins were first issued 8 years before the Statue of Liberty was put up - 1878 vs. 1886. They're normally called Morgan dollars after their designer, George T. Morgan. There's more information at the Related Question.
WEll, there is the Empire State Building (but that's not really a STATUE) so a big statue in New York would definitely have to be the famous Statue Of Liberty!! lildancer99<33
you take a picture o
because it's a national monument