Please post a new question. There isn't enough information in this question. Also, E-PLURIBUS-UNUM is NOT a type of coin. This Latin phrase is a national motto that's on most older US. coins and all modern coins. Look at the coins in your pocket. Include the denomination of the coin and a brief description of it's condition.
Look at the date and mintmark again, the last Carson City Morgan was struck in 1893.
Please look at your pocket change. ALL U.S. coins say "E Pluribus Unum" so that doesn't help to ID it. Please post a new question with the coin's date, how worn it is, and whether there is a mint mark on the back (a small O, S, or CC)
The last year Morgan Dollars were struck at the Carson-City Mint was 1893. Look at the coin again and post new question.
If you have a 1895 Morgan with a Carson-City mintmark it's fake. 1893 was the last CC Morgan dollar.
The US Mint in Carson City, Nevada [mint mark "CC"] ceased to produce coins in 1893. Please examine your coin again for the correct mint mark or date and then post a new question concerning it.
CC for the mintmark means the coin was minted at Carson City. But 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. The date and denomination are much more important.
Look at the date and mintmark again, the last Carson City Morgan was struck in 1893.
No only from 1878-1885 & 1889-1893
Please look at your pocket change. ALL U.S. coins say "E Pluribus Unum" so that doesn't help to ID it. Please post a new question with the coin's date, how worn it is, and whether there is a mint mark on the back (a small O, S, or CC)
The last year Morgan Dollars were struck at the Carson-City Mint was 1893. Look at the coin again and post new question.
Please look at the coin again, no 1902 Morgans exist with CC mintmarks, the last year was 1893.
If you have a 1895 Morgan with a Carson-City mintmark it's fake. 1893 was the last CC Morgan dollar.
CC is a mintmark identifying that the coin was minted at the Carson City (Nevada) Mint. The Carson City Mint was in operation from 1870 through 1893.
The US Mint in Carson City, Nevada [mint mark "CC"] ceased to produce coins in 1893. Please examine your coin again for the correct mint mark or date and then post a new question concerning it.
it depends on the condition. it also depends on the symbol on the back./* it can worth almost 10,000 dollars if cc marked */More information and correctionsALL US coins carry the motto E Pluribus Unum so that doesn't help to ID any particular one. Fortunately only one kind of dollar coin, the so-called Morgan dollar, was minted in 1896 which makes it possible to identify this coin.Second, the letter(s) on the back are called mint marks rather than symbols.Finally, an 1896 silver dollar could not carry a CC mint mark because the Carson City Mint closed in 1893.There's more information at the Related Question.
The single most valuable Morgan dollar is the 1893-S. A few other notable dates are the 1881-CC, '85-CC, '89-CC, '93-CC, 1894, 1895-O and S, and 1903-O.
1 HP= 15 CC so 1001 HP= 15015 CC's