There may be a mintmark below the wreath on the Morgan dollar (1878-1921) and at the tip of the eagle's tail on the Peace dollar (1921-1935). Each should weigh 26.73 grams and would contain .7736 of an ounce of silver.
Correction and more details:The Carson City Mint only operated from 1870 to 1893 so a CC mint mark could not appear on a Peace dollar or any Morgans minted after those dates. In addition to Morgans, Carson City produced Liberty Seated dollars from 1870 till the end of the series in 1873; these coins carry the mint mark in the space above "E D" in ONE DOLLAR.
Also, remember that silver dollars could have been minted at these other Mints:
Philadelphia (no mint mark on dollars until 1979)
San Francisco ("S")
New Orleans ("O", up till 1909)
Denver ("D", 1921 and later)
If you have a Liberty Seated Dime, the "CC" mint mark will be on the reverse [tails] side of the coin at the bottom and can be either inside the wreath or just below it. If you have a Liberty Seated Quarter the "CC" mint mark will be on the reverse [tails] side of the coin at the bottom below the eagle. If you have a Liberty Seated Half Dollar the "CC" mint mark will be on the reverse [tails] side of the coin at the bottom below the eagle. If you have a Lbert Seated Silver Dollar the "CC" mint mark will be on the reverse [tails] side of the coin at the bottom below the eagle. If you have a Silver Trade Dollar the "CC" mint mark will be on the reverse [tails] side of the coin a the bottom just above the "D" in "DOLLAR" If you have a Morgan Silver Dollar the "CC" mint mark will be on the reverse [tails] side of the coin at the bottom below the wreath.
There's no such coin. George T. Morgan designed the famous silver dollar that bears his name. Please post a new question with the coin's denomination, date, and mint mark.
The date and mint mark are on the edge of the coin, and it's worth one dollar.
It can't be 1964 because no silver dollars were minted for circulation in 1964. It can't have a CC mint mark because the Carson City Mint closed in 1893. Please check again and post a new question. If your "coin" actually has that denomination, date, and mint mark it's either a fantasy piece or a fake.
Much more information is needed. What is the coin's date? What condition is it in? Is it a circulation coin or a bullion piece?Please post a new question with those details. Also please note that the term is 'mint mark" and the coin is spelled dollar, just like on its reverse side.
By the mint mark on the reverse of the coin, but silver dollar coins with no mint mark are made in Philadelphia
No mint mark indicates that the coin was minted in Philadelphia.
The mint mark (if it has one) on all Morgan (1878-1904 & 1921) silver dollars is on the reverse of the coin, just above the letters "DO" in dollar.
No mint mark means the coin was minted in Philadelphia.
The mint mark (if it has one) on all Morgan silver dollars is on the reverse of the coin just above the letters "DO" in dollar.
The mintmark is on the reverse of the coin underneath the "One" in "One Dollar"
No mint mark indicates that the coin was minted in Philadelphia.
1892 Liberty silver dollar mint mark in on the reverse just above and between the D and O in Dollar at the bottom of the coin. Mine is marked with an S.
If the coin has a mintmark, it's on the reverse above the letters DO in dollar.
The coin was minted in Philadelphia, PA.
The mint mark on a Morgan dollar (if any) will be found on the reverse of the coin under the wreath between the "D" and "O" in "DOLLAR".
Keep in mind that not all silver dollars have the CC mintmark. If your coin does have a CC mintmark it would be above the DO in dollar on the back of the coin.