Only the Philadelphia & San Francisco Mints struck $20.00 gold coins in 1901
If they are $1 dollar coins, spend them. Just gold colored.
8-13-11>>> Only the Philadelphia & San Francisco Mints struck $20.00 gold coins in 1899.
None of the one dollar coins that are "Golden Colored" contain any gold - they're made of brass.
The gold colored Presidential dollar is worth one dollar. These are commonly circulated coins, and contain no gold.
The combined mintage from both Mints ( Philadelphia & San Francisco ) and including Proofs is 11,391,272 coins
None of the one dollar coins that are "Golden Colored" contain any gold - they're made of brass. A 2007 Washington dollar is just 'a dollar' so spend it.
All US $1 coins with that date were made of copper-nickel. A gold-colored one has been plated. Either way, it's only worth a dollar. All Canadian $1 coins with that date were made of a gold-colored metal called aureate nickel. Again, they're only worth a dollar.
None of the gold colored dollar coins made from 2000 to date have any gold in them. Only a few error coins and collectors coins have more than face value.
The answer to your question is NO. None of the one dollar coins that are "gold colored" contain any gold, they're made of brass. Neither coin is rare by any means.
At present, the U.S. mints coins in denominations of 1, 5, 10, 25, and 50 cents, as well as one dollar (which is 100 cents). In the past, there were once coins for 1/2, 2, 3, and 20 cents, and gold coins for 2.50, 3, 5, 10, and 20 dollars. There also used to be both gold and silver one dollar coins.
The gold colored Sacajawea dollars are worth a dollar. All current U.S. $1 coins are not gold, they're gold-colored. The metal is a manganese-brass alloy. They're worth $1 each, regardless of the design. Feel free to spend them as billions have been struck.OTOH $1 gold coins issued in the 1800s were real gold and are worth considerably more than $1, but you need to know their dates and mint marks.