It is not a silver dollar, but a silver "art bar" and its value is directly tied to the spot price of silver. Right now that is about $13 an ounce, so expect a dealer to pay about $10 and sell for $15.
These are both considered common dates for Walking Liberty Half Dollars. In circulated condition, their value will be based mainly on the silver they contain -- currently $2.50 to $3.00 apiece.
Most dates of Walking Liberty halves are common, so the retail value is primarily for the silver content. At current silver prices, one would probably sell for about $6.
half dollars with "Liberty in the name were minted from 1839-1947. be more specific.
The Silver Dollar - 1909 was released on: USA: 15 February 1909
Post new question with the dates.
A Mercury dime is worth about a dollar just for the silver in it. The value goes from there to several thousand dollars for certain dates/mintmarks in high grades.
The 1963-D Franklin half is one of the most common dates in the series. It's currently worth about $10.50 for the silver.
1922 is one of the most common dates for US silver dollars. They currently sell for around $20-$25 each.
Most sell for a couple dollars over the spot price of silver (currently around $18-$20) but a few specific dates have a numismatic premium. There are also proof coins that command a higher price.
It depends greatly on the year, early silver dollar proof dollars can be worth several thousand dollars, modern silver dollar proofs of common dates might be worth $20 or so for silver scrap.
The Liberty Seated Dollar design replaced it. Historical Note = although all Gobrecht Dollars bear the dates 1836 - 1839, a number of them were in fact minted in the 1850s to the 1870s to satisfy collectors. These, however, still show the original dates of 1836-1839.
No U.S. silver dollars have an Indian Head design, so if you have one it's not real. A genuine silver dollar coin dated 1851 would be a Seated Liberty coin. I have seen many 'fantasy' silver rounds with the Indian Head design with different dates, but they all have the 1oz .999 fine silver markings somewhere on the coin.