It's the same color as a quarter but a bit larger. It has a portrait of Ms. Anthony on the front and an eagle landing on the moon on its back. The dates will be 1979, 1980, 1981, or 1999.
BTW the coin is made of copper-nickel, not silver. Any that you find in change are only worth $1.
That's either 1979 or 1999, because none were made in 1989. Either way, it's only worth one dollar.
She went to the city hall and protested for woman able to vote.
Are you speaking about the Declaration of Sentiments? If so then it was presented at the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848 in Seneca Falls, NY.
She was 5 foot 5 inches. More information at the link below: http://www.rochester.edu/SBA/PDFs/SBA%20Bio%20-%201945.pdf
None of the SBA Dollar coins struck for general circulation (except the 1979-P Near Date) have more than face value. Only proof and uncirculated collectors coins sold from the Mint have premiums.
Nothing. It's a fake. The United States Mint never struck such a coin. Ever. You have a Liberty nickel. The image is Miss Liberty - that's why her headband has the word LIBERTY on it. SBA was, to put it mildly, very much reviled at that time and never would have been on a coin.
A 1910 Liberty nickel is worth a couple of bucks in average condition.
the susan b anthony speech is about the presidental election and she had a chance to tell the world that wmen and men can vote so it can all be even
Susan Brownell Anthony was born February 15,1820 in Adams Massachusetts to Daniel and Lucy Anthony. Susan was the second born of eight children in a strict Quaker family. Her father, Daniel Anthony, was a stern man, a Quaker Abolitionist and a cotton manufacturer. He believed in guiding his children, not directing them. He did not allow them to experience the childish amusements of toys,games,and music,which were seen as distractions from the inner light. Instead he enforced self-discipline, principled convictions, and belief in one's own self-worth.Susan was a precocious child and she learned to read and write at the age of three. In 1826, the Anthonys moved from Massachusetts to Battensville,N.Y. where Susan attended a district school. When the teacher refused to teach Susan long division, Susan was taken out of school and taught in a "home school" set up by her father. The school was run by a woman teacher, Mary Perkins. Perkins offered a new image of womanhood to Susan and her sisters.She was independent and educated and held a position that had traditionally been reserved to young men. Ultimately, Susan was sent to boarding school near Philadelphia. Susan taught at a female academy, Eunice Kenyon's Quaker boarding school, in upstate New York from 1846-49. After, she settled in her family home in Rochester, New York. It was here that she began her first public crusade on behalf of temperance.
She was considered because she led the struggle to emancipate women from the deprivation of the right to vote.
All Anthony dollars have outer layers of .750 copper & .250 nickel bonded to a pure copper core, the same as dimes, quarters, and half dollars. None were ever struck in a silver alloy, even in collectors' issues.
Susan B Anthony Did not have any kids....She was only Married and then died.
Mass8.1 g (0.260 troy oz)Diameter26.5 mm (1.04 in)Thickness2.0 mm (.09875 in)
Susan B Anthony was somewhat a woman's right leader. Because, the 15th amend. stated that former slaves could all vote now, and have the rights of white people. Susan believed that because she used to be a slave that would imply that she had the right to vote.
Assuming that you are referring to the Susan B Anthony dollar, the date was located beneath the portrait of Ms. Anthony. All such dollar coins have a date.
There's no such coin. Anthony appears on $1 coins dated 1978-81 and 1999.
Cents have carried a picture of:
Miss Liberty: 1793-1857
A flying eagle: 1857-1858
A Native American princess: 1959-1909
Abraham Lincoln: 1909-present
Please post a new question with the coin's date.
She didnt want to go because she believed that they could win freedom
Ethos is used to establish trust with an audience.