Sorry no E mint mark coins. The mint mark ( if it has one) is on the reverse to the left of the arrows near the rim. Please post new question with more information
If the coin is a real Morgan or Peace dollar. The value is just for the silver, about $20.00.
$10 Indian Head gold coins were minted for many years. In order to give an estimated value the date on your coin must be known.
All U.S. coins dated 1972 have the motto E-PLURIBUS-UNUM. The only $1 coin minted that year is the Eisenhower dollar. None of the coins were struck in gold. It has been privately gold plated, and has no numismatic value. It's worth $1 unless you find someone that wants it.
The fact that a coin has E Pluribus Unum, the national motto, on it generally wouldn't be much help in identifying it. However in this case it indicates your coin is actually a silver dollar that's been gold-plated, not a gold dollar. Actual gold $1 coins don't carry the motto because they're so small. Unfortunately the gold plating means your coin is altered goods from a coin-collecting viewpoint. At a minimum it's still worth its silver value, about 0.77 times the current price of silver. If it's not worn or otherwise damaged it will still make a nice piece of jewelry or simply a conversation piece.
Silver, not gold. E Pluribus Unum, not "eplurius" (check the spelling on the coin) Plus, ALL coins have that motto so it doesn't help to ID a particular item. Presumably it IS a dollar coin, at least. In that case the gold color is because it was plated for use in jewelry or similar. That would make it an altered coin worth only its metal value, about $14 as of 08/2008
Sorry, no E series US coin of any type. But a 1911 Quarter Eagle has retail values of $178.00-$300.00 depending on grade.
We need more information before we can tell you. All coins say "e pluribus unum," so that is not a unique feature. Looking at some coin sellers, 1911 Liberty Head nickels range from $2 to $20. The value of a coin is not just about its year-- it has to do with how rare the coin is, how many were put into circulation, and what condition the coin is in.
It can't be a coin and bill at the same time.
If the coin is a real Morgan or Peace dollar. The value is just for the silver, about $20.00.
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.
$10 Indian Head gold coins were minted for many years. In order to give an estimated value the date on your coin must be known.
Robinet e l'avventuriera - 1911 was released on: Italy: July 1911 UK: 16 July 1911 France: 21 July 1911 Germany: 22 July 1911 USA: 6 September 1911
The woman on the front of the coin is not " Mother Mary" It's Sacagawea, the guide for the Lewis & Clark expedition and the coin is brass not gold. Value is one dollar.
All U.S. coins dated 1972 have the motto E-PLURIBUS-UNUM. The only $1 coin minted that year is the Eisenhower dollar. None of the coins were struck in gold. It has been privately gold plated, and has no numismatic value. It's worth $1 unless you find someone that wants it.
The fact that a coin has E Pluribus Unum, the national motto, on it generally wouldn't be much help in identifying it. However in this case it indicates your coin is actually a silver dollar that's been gold-plated, not a gold dollar. Actual gold $1 coins don't carry the motto because they're so small. Unfortunately the gold plating means your coin is altered goods from a coin-collecting viewpoint. At a minimum it's still worth its silver value, about 0.77 times the current price of silver. If it's not worn or otherwise damaged it will still make a nice piece of jewelry or simply a conversation piece.
La lotta e i lottatori - 1911 was released on: Italy: August 1911 UK: 31 August 1911 Austria: 1 September 1911 France: 1 September 1911 Germany: 2 September 1911 USA: 4 October 1911
Cretinetti e l'ago - 1911 was released on: USA: 13 May 1911 UK: 4 June 1911 France: 27 February 1914