Nine dollars and 45 cents
Ten American dollars. Unless it has some kind of defect or it is extremely old or rare its not worth much more than it says it is.
The average annual income of an American family in 1938 was $2116. The cost of a new house was about $3900 and gas was about ten cents per gallon.
The UK shilling is no longer legal tender. However, it was half of a pound sterling or 50 pence. At the current rate (@16 Jul 2011) that is approximately 81 cents.
I think you're confusing the coin with the modern "eagle" pieces that are minted for collectors and carry artificial denominations. In the 19th century gold coins were made for use in ordinary commerce and an "eagle" was a specific denomination, ten dollars.
About 0.40 American Cents
Common -- you can find in a coin dealer's foreign bin for 20 cents or less.
Face value only.
10 cents, it's a novelty coin that has been plated.
At current conversion rates (31 July 2016), a ten dollar Jamaican coin is worth 8 cents.
Ten cents if the coin is completely uncirculated. If your coin has any wear/tarnish/evidence of being in circulation, it is probably only worth one cent.
Ten cents
60%
ten cents unless you melt it down, in which case it is worth nothing
5 cents
Yes, ten cents. It's an ordinary circulation coin. The D indicates that it was minted in Denver.
first of all, its ¥10, or yen, not cents. Its around 10¢ in American dollars if planning to trade. If it has ridges on the edge, then keep it or sell it. it is worth more than 10¢