Some of them were 14k gold @ .5 grams. today @ $1800.00 oz for gold 14k if .583 Purity.
The value is roughly $17.00.
The first St. Gaudens double eagles were released in 1907, so a 1904 St. Gaudens coin is not possible. Please check your coin again. If you have a 1904 double eagle with a Liberty head design, it's worth between $1000 and $1100 depending on how worn it is. If you have a different date with the St. Gaudens Standing Liberty design, please post a new question with that information. Copy each of these links into your browser to see images of each design: http://coinfacts.com/double_eagles/liberty_with_motto_double_eagles/1904_liberty_head_double_eagle.htm http://coinfacts.com/double_eagles/saint_gaudens_double_eagles/1910_saint_gaudens_double_eagle.htm
Yes, the Gaudens $20 gold coin, often referred to as the Saint-Gaudens double eagle, does have a version that is marked with the word "COPY." This marking is typically found on replica or reproduction coins, which are not intended to be used as legal tender. Genuine coins do not have this inscription. Always verify the authenticity of any coin to distinguish between originals and replicas.
You can purchase a copy of the 1905 edition for $30.
It depends on the copy. A copy coin could have either no gold content or it could be pure gold, it is impossible to say because there is no regulation on copy coins.
Most likely. They were demonetized and destroyed sometime in 1933. There was documentation proving that one was legally exported before the gold act was passed. It is valued in 7 figures. Ten more are currently held by the Treasury department but the people who sent them to verify their authenticity is suing to have them returned. It will be interesting to see how this is resolved.
There is no patron saint of copy machines unless those machines are computers. The patron saint of computers and the Internet is St. Isidore of Seville.
worth of ceaae coin copy
No, a copy is not worth anything to a collector.
There are copies made for nearly every date/mintmark collection for US coins. Some are well made and meant to fool collectors, others are clearly marked COPY and designed to be a space holder for collectors who can't afford the original coin and still others are contemporary counterfeits (and contemporary counterfeits are usually collectible) and these were designed to pass for $20 back in 1931 and were usually gold plated.
This has no numismatic value at all
As a copy, it's not worth much of anything.
If it's a copy, it's not worth anything.