It's a very common mistake that most people make but there is no such coin as an E PLURIBUS UNUM coin of any type.
E PLURIBUS UNUM is the NATIONAL MOTTO that appears on all most every coin ever made by the US and all modern coins, just look at your pocket change. All Morgan dollars (1878-1904 & 1921) regardless of date have this motto on the obverse of the coins. The 1883 Morgan dollar is not a rare coin by any means. Circulated coins have values of $38.00-$41.00 depending on th grade of the coin.
50.00
$17.00-$26.00 and it's a Morgan Dollar NOT a E PLURIBUS UNUM dollar
A denomination is needed, post new question. silver dollar piece
E Pluribus Unum is on every American coin 1926=$20 1926D=$22 1926S=$21
Assuming you mean a Morgan silver dollar and not a gold one dollar coin, if the coin is circulated and has no mintmarks, retail value is $26.00-$32.00 depending on how much wear the coin has. The 1883 Morgan is a common date.
50.00
$17.00-$26.00 and it's a Morgan Dollar NOT a E PLURIBUS UNUM dollar
.76 troy ounce.
If it's a copy, it's not worth anything.
A denomination is needed, post new question. silver dollar piece
E Pluribus Unum is on every American coin 1926=$20 1926D=$22 1926S=$21
It's a very common Morgan dollar with values of $17.00-$26.00 for circulated coins
Value depends on the condition, low $15.00 high $30.00
Assuming you mean a Morgan silver dollar and not a gold one dollar coin, if the coin is circulated and has no mintmarks, retail value is $26.00-$32.00 depending on how much wear the coin has. The 1883 Morgan is a common date.
Please see the Related Question because the coin isn't a silver eagle. "Silver eagles" are modern bullion coins containing 1 oz of silver and sold by the Mint to collectors and investors. What you have is a $1 coin called a Morgan dollar minted for use in ordinary commerce. At the time the price of silver was controlled and the coin was in fact worth exactly one dollar. Also, All Morgan and Peace dollars carry the motto E Pluribus Unum as do most other U.S. coins so that's not a distinguishing piece of information.
Please see the Related Question because the coin isn't a silver eagle. "Silver eagles" are modern bullion coins containing 1 oz of silver and sold by the Mint to collectors and investors. What you have is a $1 coin called a Morgan dollar minted for use in ordinary commerce. At the time the price of silver was controlled and the coin was in fact worth exactly one dollar. Also, All Morgan and Peace dollars carry the motto E Pluribus Unum as do most other U.S. coins so that's not a distinguishing piece of information.
A circulated coin has a value of between 32.00-39.00 dollars today.