Although 1878 was the first year issue for the Morgan dollar, the San Francisco Mint struck about 10 million coins that year and unfortunately that makes this issue common. Circulated examples run from $20.00 to $30.00 depending on the grade of the coin. Mint State coins are $40.00 to $70.00.
It depends on what it is made out of. The coin itself is worthless, any value comes from the precious metal content in a coin. There is no standard when making copy coins, the coin could contain 100% pure silver like some silver rounds do, they could use a different precious metal (such as gold or platinum, though, that is unlikely) or it could contain no precious metal content at all and be made out of lead, pewter, nickel, copper, etc.
2,000
July 31, 2009 Morgan Silver Dollars were not minted until 1878. The silver dollar coin minted by the US Mint in 1875 was the Trade Dollar and they were struck at 3 Mint facilities; Philadelphia, shown as 1875-P , Carson City, shown as 1875-CC and San Francisco, shown as 1875-S. The mint mark can be found on the reverse [tails] side of the coin just above the letter "D" in the word "DOLLAR". The values for these coins are shown in the chart below. Circulated Grades..............1875-P............1875-CC......1875-S G4......................................$160................$200.............$90 F12.....................................$325................$350.............$150 EF40...................................$600................$550.............$250 AU55...................................$1,000.............$875.............$350 Uncirculated GradesMS60...................................$2,400..............$2,500..........$800 MS62...................................$3,200..............$3,250..........$1,400 MS63...................................$5,750..............$5,500..........$2,200 MS64...................................$9,000..............$13,500.........$3,850 MS65...................................$32,000............$40,000.........$17,500 MS66...................................$50,000............$85,000.........$27,500
If you have a Seated Liberty dollar dated 1875, then you have a counterfeit -- the last year for them was 1873
Wondering waht sheets rs co 1875 silver trays, silverware are worth
Yes, a magnet will not stick to a 1875 silver dollar because silver is not a magnetic metal. Silver is a non-ferrous metal, which means it does not have magnetic properties.
No, a 1875 trade dollar is made of 90% silver and 10% copper, which are non-magnetic metals. A magnet will not stick to it.
This is a Trade Dollar and about the most faked US coin of all! The 1875 has 7 kinds of this date. Take it to a coin dealer.
With a date of 1875 it's not a one dollar silver coin, but a Trade Dollar that was not legal tender in the US. It was used by the government in the world market for foreign trade. Many have been counterfeited and replicas are common. Authentic coins of this date have retail values $300.00-$900.00 for circulated coins and mint state coins start at about $2,000.00. It can be worth anywhere from $125 to $12,650 USD depending on its condition.
No, a CC 1875 trade dollar is made of 90% silver, which is not magnetic. Magnets typically only stick to metals like iron, nickel, and cobalt.
No such coin exists. No British trade dollar was struck until 1895.
Mary Morgan Keipp was born in 1875.
David Morgan Adams was born in 1875.