pkrs: 85
the going rate for euro to dollar is approximately 1.4 euros 4 every 1 u s dollar. hope this is helpful god bless
In 1862 the United States passed a law known as "The Legal Tender Act" as a part of this law was 'the Parity Act" which stated in relevant part that all legal tender will hold the face value of the note. So in essence a dollar in 1933, 1950 and in todays money is still worth the same because 'law' says it MUST be. The buying power of that money however does change, in 1950 a loaf of bread cost $0.14 per loaf today it would cost $2.00 per loaf (avg) - so if we use that buying power as a guide the dollar in 1950 was worth 7.5 dollars in 2009 (simplified). Source: 73D Congress 1st session report #43 (1933)
That's DOLLAR, just like it's spelled on the back of the coin and on every bill in your wallet.In any case you'll need to post a new question with the coin's date and whether or not it has a mint mark. If it's a Morgan dollar (1878-1921) look on the back over the DO in DOLLAR to see if there's a small S, O, CC, or D. If it's a Peace dollar (1922-1935) look near the word ONE for a small D or S.
1 rupees = 0.0110266 us dollar $
Buying slowed down at the end of the 1920's because everyone had what they needed.
today 22cat gold rate
One dollar could buy lots of things: Soda pop, candy, etc. Almost anything you can get at the dollar tree today you could get in the 80's.
the going rate for euro to dollar is approximately 1.4 euros 4 every 1 u s dollar. hope this is helpful god bless
paying ten cents on the dollar for stock paying ten cents on the dollar for stock paying ten cents on the dollar for stock paying ten cents on a dollar of stock
If you asking the value of the U.S. Two (2 ) Dollar bill today it is nothing. In late 70's the bank did a recall on the bill and afterwards devalued the 2 dollar bill These are collectors items only
what was the value of a dollar in the 1960's
The currency used in Singapore is Singapore Dollar (symbol: $, abbreviation: SGD). Brunei dollars are accepted almost like the local currency.
If you hold your 1852 $1 gold piece, it would worth more than $100 today Inflation continues to drastically decrease the value of a dollar. What you could buy for dollar in 1852 would cost you $27.60, meaning that dollar would be worth about 4 cents in today's world.
No its not. The letters are the initials of Frank Gasparro who designed the coin. The only mint marks used today on dollar coins are P, S, and D.
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The S mintmark stands for San Francisco. So your coins was made at the San Francisco mint. That mint is still in operation today.