Most experts will not answer general questions of "How Much Is This Coin Worth?" mainly due to the fact that there is no simple answer. Dates, mintmarks, denomination, condition of the coin, and other factors provide a wide range of value quotes. Just the date or type of coin is not enough information to answer such a question. The best advice is to obtain a book from a bookseller or local coin shop called "A GUIDE TO UNITED STATES COINS" by RS Yeoman - The "Red Book" as it is called. This book is the mainstay for coin values for dealers and collectors. The ISBNs are = ISBN-10: 079482267-3 ; and ISBN-13: 978-079482267-5. Bear in mind that the quotes in that book are top-end retail; most collectors or dealers will most likely offer slightly less. You might find older volumes in some libraries; but these may have outdated quotes.
Face value- 25 cents. Those are not silver unless it is specially struck proof set coin. Look at the edge, you should see copper on an ordinary quarter.
What is the value of my coin-1776-1976 Eisenhower Liberty dollow?
Exactly the value of the copper in the coin. No more. The current price of copper is about $3.50 pound. So your coin just has sentimental value.
Please post a new question with the coin's denomination.
It is a copper bullion coin and its value is close to whatever the copper market is.
Uh, a centennial is 100 years. 1776 to 1976 is TWO hundred years so that would be a Bicentennial coin.
The value of the copper in a 2 Pence coin would be significantly less then 10% of the face value of the coin at the time the coin was minted. Today, it might be a little more, about 0.2 Pence.
If the dates are 1776-1976 your coin is not gold, it's gold-plated. Millions were struck in copper-nickel to honor the U.S. Bicentennial. They're only worth face value to $1.15, except for uncirculated or proof versions. The fact that your coin is plated makes it an altered coin with no extra value, unfortunately.
One dollar.
A nickel with copper infused is still worth 5 cents, as the metal composition of the coin is what determines its value. The added copper may change the appearance of the coin but not its monetary worth.
Sorry, no US coins dated 1776 with a Twenty D. denomination were struck. 1793 is the first year for ANY US coin.
Assuming it's a circulation strike with no mint mark or a "D", it's only worth face value. Huge numbers were made for the Bicentennial and most were saved, so they're very common. Also the coin is actually cupronickel rather than copper.