Nearly all American coins carry the motto "E Pluribus Unum" ("From Many, One") so noting that a coin carries that wording isn't specific enough to identify it. Please post a new question with the coin's denomination.
Although the national motto E-PLURIBUS-UNUM does prominently appear on the obverse (front) of these coins, they are MORGAN dollars. A 1900 Morgan is common, values for circulated coins run from $31.00-$37.00.
A denomination is needed.
Circulated coins are $17.00 to $30.00 and it's a Morgan dollar not an E PLURIBUS UNUM coin.
See related answers.
Include the coin's denomination and try again.
Although the national motto E-PLURIBUS-UNUM does prominently appear on the obverse (front) of these coins, they are MORGAN dollars. A 1900 Morgan is common, values for circulated coins run from $31.00-$37.00.
A denomination is needed.
Please be more specific
E Pluribus Unum does NOT identify a coin. Post a new question and include the country of origin, denomination, and date.
Circulated coins are $17.00 to $30.00 and it's a Morgan dollar not an E PLURIBUS UNUM coin.
5 cents
A five cent coin from 2005 is worth five cents.
Include the coin's denomination and try again.
See related answers.
OK, what one. ALL US COINS have the motto E PLURIBUS UNUM
E Pluribus Unum is on every American coin 1926=$20 1926D=$22 1926S=$21
The phrase "E pluribus unum" does nothing to describe the coin, because it's found on most US coins. That said, a 2011 US dollar coin is worth exactly one dollar.