No such coin was ever issued by the US Mint. Private mints produce many coins and tokens for sale to the public and establish their own price for them. Numismatically, it has no value other than the worth of the metals use to produce it. Some private mint issues are becoming collectable but the value of them usually rests between the buyer and the seller.
The school colors are gold & blue , i don't no if Fisk has a mascot or not sooo:0(
The surname Fisk originates from England. The name derived from the Old Norse word "fiskr", and the Olde English pre 7th Century "fisc", which both mean fish. Fisk was originally given as an occupational name to a fisherman. Fisk occurs as a personal name in the Domesday Book of 1086 for Norfolk. Notable people who bear the name are William Fisk (1796 - 1872), a successful painter, and his son, William Henry Fisk, (1827 - 1884), draftsman of anatomy to the College of Surgeons, and lecturer at the University College School, London. A Coat of Arms granted to the family is a shield chequy silver and red, on a black pale three gold mullets, the Crest being a gold estoile on the point of a triangle. The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of Robert Fisk, which was dated 1230, during the reign of King Henry 111.
Jay Gould, and Jim Fisk
It's William Henry Harrison, not Jefferson, and it's worth one dollar.
The coin is brass not gold, the names are on the front of the coin.
It depends on which denomination coin you have. A $10 coin has more gold than a $5 coin.
The answer to the riddle is a gold coin. It has a head and a tail, but no body.
If the coin is dated between 1840-1907 there is .12094oz pure gold in the coin.
If the coin is a modern gold bullion coin it is 1/4oz of pure gold. If it's a pre-1933 coin it has .48375oz of pure gold in it.
there is a gold coin in the fountain with the planets on the plate
What type of Australian gold coin? Do you refer to a gold coloured coin such as the One and Two Dollar coins, or a bullion coin? If you refer to a bullion coin, please provide the weight and theme of the coin.
No, a gold clad coin is not pure gold. It is typically a thinly plated layer of gold over a base metal. The thickness of the gold layer can vary, but the majority of the coin is made up of the base metal.