It is going to depend on the condition of the individual coins and if it includes any of the varieties, but you can get an idea from the related link.
There's no such coin. George T. Morgan designed the famous silver dollar that bears his name. Please post a new question with the coin's denomination, date, and mint mark.
It's not a real Morgan silver dollar. It's a modern bullion piece (as indicated by the ".999 fine silver") that copies the Morgan design. The good news is that depending on the amount of silver it contains, it could be worth more than the melt value of a real Morgan. Morgan dollars contained about 0.77 oz. of pure silver, so if your piece is 1 oz it's worth about 1/3 more at melt. Of course, a real Morgan could also be worth MUCH more as a collectible depending on its date and mint mark, too!
The date and mint mark are on the edge of the coin, and it's worth one dollar.
Yes I have I have a 1921 Morgan dollar that doesn't have the D below the wreathRevisions to AnswerThose are 2 different situations. A letter below the wreath would be a mint mark. However coins made in Philadelphia back then did not have mint marks, so that would be normal. However, if the D in the word "Dollar" was missing (i.e. it says "ollar") that could be a minor error due to a filled die.
What date? What mint mark? Please post a new question. Any coin of either denomination minted in 1971 or later will be worth face value only. If either coin is older than that it will be worth more for its metal content and possibly as a collectible, but without the date and mint mark it's not possible to tell.
There is no such coin. Morgan dollars* were not issued until 1878. If you have a Liberty Seated dollar with that date, its value depends on its condition and mint mark: No mint mark - $400 if very worn, $1000 if moderately worn, $1600 if like new "O" mint mark - $250, $750, $1200 If you have a Morgan dollar with the date 1850 it is a counterfeit. (*) The coin is called a Morgan dollar after its designer. It carries the image of Miss Liberty, not the head of Mr. Morgan.
The Carson-City Mint struck Morgan dollars for many years, so a date is needed.
The date 1891 would make it a Morgan dollar, so the mint mark is on the reverse (tails) side, near the bottom, just above the letters "do" in the word "dollar."
above the DO in the dollar
Please post a new question with the coin's date.
Values for circulated coins are $17.00-$26.00 1885 is a very common date.
No such thing as a "strike mark" but U.S. coins do have Mintmarks. For Morgan dollars, they are on the reverse just above the DO in DOLLAR.
There's no such coin. George T. Morgan designed the famous silver dollar that bears his name. Please post a new question with the coin's denomination, date, and mint mark.
A Morgan dollar without a mint mark would have been minted in Philadelphia. The P mint mark wasn't used on $1 coins until 1979. But more information is needed to determine a value. Morgan dollars were minted from 1878 to 1904 and again in 1921 so you need to know the coin's date, plus have an idea of how worn it is. Please post a brand-new question with the coin's date, or enter the question "What is the value of a [date] US silver dollar?" in the box at the top of the page. [date] is of course your coin's specific year.
The mint mark on any Morgan dollar is located on the reverse (tails) side, near the bottom, just above the letters "do" in the word "dollar."
The mint mark on any Morgan dollar is on the reverse above the letters DO in dollar.
It's called a Morgan Dollar not a lady liberty dollar. The 1882-S is a common date/mint Morgan, circulated coins are valued at $17.00-$26.00