You need to provide more and different information. ALL coins in the U.S. have the motto E Pluribus Unum on them (check your change!!!!) so that is not a distinguishing feature. What matters is a coin's date, condition, and mint mark.
In 1880 four different mints struck dollars so you need to look for the mint mark on the reverse under the eagle. It'll be blank, an O, an S, or CC. Then check a price list such as http://www.numismedia.com/fmv/prices/mordlr/pricesgd.shtml
The highest value silver coin struck in 1880 was a $1 "Morgan" dollar. Please check your coin again and post a new question including a brief description of its design to help ID the coin.
Retail values for circulated coins are $17.00-$28.00 depending on the grade of the coin. 1880 Morgans are a common date.
It depends if a 1880 silver dollar would be worth. If you can see that the first 8 in the coins date is over a 7, it could be worth $100-$250 dollars. If it doesn't have an 8 over a 7 its worth about $8.00.
$27 to $70,000 depending upon the mint mark, the variety and the condition of the coin.
That depends on the denomination of the coin.
The highest value silver coin struck in 1880 was a $1 "Morgan" dollar. Please check your coin again and post a new question including a brief description of its design to help ID the coin.
Retail values for circulated coins are $17.00-$28.00 depending on the grade of the coin. 1880 Morgans are a common date.
1848. Silver. Twenty. Dollar. Coin
Depending on how much wear the coin has the 1880 Morgan dollar has retail values of $17.00-$26.00, it's a very common coin
It depends if a 1880 silver dollar would be worth. If you can see that the first 8 in the coins date is over a 7, it could be worth $100-$250 dollars. If it doesn't have an 8 over a 7 its worth about $8.00.
$27 to $70,000 depending upon the mint mark, the variety and the condition of the coin.
That depends on the denomination of the coin.
If it has no mintmark it means the coin was struck in Philadelphia.
Assuming the coin is circulated, the 1880-S Morgan is a high mintage common date, retail values, as of 4-20-11, are $38.00-$44.00 depending on the grade of the coin.
Probably not. A coin that has been damaged after production is not normally worth anything. It will have some base silver value, but not much. You should check with a coin dealer to be sure though.
The coin is not a silver liberty dollar. It's a 1979 Susan B. Anthony Dollar coin and has no silver in it and the value is one dollar.
In your search box of your home page type in 1880 silver dollar an click on images. This will bring up many pictures.