Please look at the coin again, The US no longer makes $1.00 gold coins.
CorrectionThe coin is brass, not gold. It's a Sacajawea dollar and shows a stylized picture of that Native American guide, not the Statue of Liberty. The Statue of Liberty appears on the reverse side of Presidential-series $1 coins minted since 2007.Assuming you are referring to an 1886 Morgan Silver dollar the answer is no. But their is a 1986 Statue of Liberty Centennial silver dollar.
It is a stylized portrait of Miss Liberty. Compare to the face of the Statue of Liberty.
Uh, the "girl" is Miss Liberty - as in "Statue of..." !!
The coin is the 1986 Statue of Liberty Centennial dollar, it's 90% silver and 10% copper.
No, but there are "Walking Liberty" American Silver Eagle coins.
The coin is 90% silver and 10% copper.
9.61
Uh, the "Liberty woman" is Miss Liberty, as in "Statue of ..." Please see the Related Question for more information.
All silver dollars issued from 1794 to 1935 carry a picture of Miss Liberty, as in "Statue of ..."
The coin is actually a "Statue of Liberty Centennial" silver dollar and is very common with a current retail value of $26.00.
Current average retail value is $29.00
If you go by the strict definition of "Liberty dollar" (i.e. a silver dollar made from 1794 to 1935) the answer is yes - these coins are 90% silver and 10% copper. But many people mistakenly call newer $1 coins "Liberty dollars" because they either have the word Liberty or a picture of the Statue of Liberty on them. These coins are either copper-nickel or brass, but not silver.