COPY is a dead giveaway. It's a replica sold as a novelty item in a gift shop, and has little or no value to collectors.
About $33,000
The short-lived Confederate States of America only issued two coins, the one cent and the half dollar. A genuine Confederate half dollar is so rare that it does not have a listed value. A number of restrikes were made decades later which run from a few thousand to tens of thousands of dollars in value depending on their wear.
There are only 4 known genuine 1861 C.S.A. Seated Liberty half dollars. Many replicas and counterfeits exist.
$1175
The Confederate States of America never struck a $5 dollar coin, only half dollars (4)& one cent (15) coins.
About $33,000
$632,000
No such thing
The short-lived Confederate States of America only issued two coins, the one cent and the half dollar. A genuine Confederate half dollar is so rare that it does not have a listed value. A number of restrikes were made decades later which run from a few thousand to tens of thousands of dollars in value depending on their wear.
The L.W.Bristol Classics is a known maker of Confederate coin reproductions. There are only 4 authentic 1861 Liberty Seated half dollars with the Confederate reverse. This piece has no numismatic collectible value.
Your coin is either a copy, a fantasy piece, or a counterfeit. All 4 of the genuine Confederate half dollars and the 15 one cent coins are dated 1861
See related answers
There are only 4 known genuine 1861 C.S.A. Seated Liberty half dollars. Many replicas and counterfeits exist.
I don't know what the T after the date is but I know it's fake. Confederate coin reproductions are sold all over the southern states in gift shops, real Confederate coins are pretty much accounted for.
$1175
The Confederate States of America struck no gold coins of any denomination or date. It is NOT genuine.
february 1861