In 1885 the US mint at Carson City, Nevada struck 228,000 silver Morgan Dollars. Dollars were the only coins being struck at Carson City in 1885 although dimes, quarters and half dollars had been minted there in prior years.
"CC" is the mint mark for US silver dollars minted at Carson City, Nevada. The Carson City mint only operated from 1870 to 1893. There are many fake "CC" coins with other dates so be very careful. Silver dollars can have other mint marks as well - Philadelphia didn't use a P mint mark at that time, but there could also be an "S" for San Francisco, an "O" for New Orleans, or a "D" for Denver (1921 and later)
The 1889 cc Morgan silver dollar, minted in Carson City, Nevada, has a total mintage of approximately 350,000 coins. This figure makes it one of the less common dates in the Morgan dollar series, contributing to its popularity among collectors. The coin is notable for its distinctive design and historical significance.
There were no silver dollars minted from 1804 to 1835 inclusive, and the Carson City mint only operated from 1870 to 1893. There are many fake dollar 'coins' with impossible dates and/or mint marks so you may well have one of those.
No US silver dollars were minted for circulation from 1804 to 1835 inclusive, and Trade dollars were only minted from 1873 to 1885. If your coin says ONE DOLLAR and is dated 1805 it's either a fantasy coin, a bullion "round" or one of the many fakes...
Please see the attached link.More:The value depends on where the coin was minted and what condition it is in. The 1871 Seated Liberty Silver Dollar was minted in Philadelphia and Carson City. According to USA Coin Book, these are the values of this coin: Philadelphia (no mint mark): A coin in good condition is worth about $215 up to about $1,700 in MS60 mint condition. In MS63 choice uncirculated grade, this coin is worth about $4,000. Proof coins were also minted in Philadelphia and these are worth roughly $3,750.Carson City (small "CC" mint mark): A coin in good condition is worth about $1,900 up to about $72,250 in MS60 mint condition. Not many coins are known to exist beyond this good of condition but they would be most certainly be worth much more.
Carson City Morgan dollars were issued for many years. Each coin has its own value based upon the year it was minted and the condition of the coin.
The Carson City, Nevada Mint produced 3 different series of one dollar coins from 1870 to 1893. Seated Liberty / 19,288 Trade Dollar / 4,211,400 Morgan dollar / 13,862,041 TOTAL= 18,092,729
1,136,000 silver dollars were struck at Carson City in 1884. Other circulation mintages for that year: Philadelphia - 14,070,000 New Orleans - 9,730,000 San Francisco - 3,200,000 Philadelphia minted 875 proofs, Carson City made 3, and New Orleans made 1.
The rarest mintmark for half dollars would be Carson City (CC mintmark) only a bit more than 5 million half dollars were minted at Carson City. While many times that were struck in San Fransisco, Philadelphia, Denver and New Orleans.
"CC" is the mint mark for US silver dollars minted at Carson City, Nevada. The Carson City mint only operated from 1870 to 1893. There are many fake "CC" coins with other dates so be very careful. Silver dollars can have other mint marks as well - Philadelphia didn't use a P mint mark at that time, but there could also be an "S" for San Francisco, an "O" for New Orleans, or a "D" for Denver (1921 and later)
Carson City is capital city of Nevada.
The Carson City Mint did not strike proof coins. Unfortunately many privet mints have made and sold replicas of these coins that have no collectible value at all. But you may have what are called GSA cased Morgans from the Carson City Mint that are uncirculated, not proof coins and they do have good value. Please have a collector or dealer look at the coins for a accurate evaluation.
According to the US Census Bureau (2010), Carson City's population was 55,274, of which 1.9% were of African decent. This would mean there are about 1,050 Africans in Carson City.
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