What denomination?
No such thing as a E PLURIBUS UNUM coin. This Latin phrase is the national motto that appears on the obverse (front) of all Morgan silver dollars. Asumming it is a Morgan dollar. The value depends on the condition of the coin. 1887 is a common date for this series of U.S. silver dollars. Current average retail values for circulated coins are $30.00-$40.00.
The 1887s US coin in VF-20 list at$275.
The coin is a very common MORGAN dollar, circulated examples sell for $17.00-$26.00 depending on condition.
Assuming the coin is circulated and has no mintmarks. It's a very common date, values run from $30.00 to $40.00 depending on the grade of the coin.
What denomination?
The coin is face value.
E PLURIBUS UNUM is NOT a type of silver dollar, it is the national motto. Please post a new question with the date of the coin.
It is worth $50.
No such thing as a E PLURIBUS UNUM coin. This Latin phrase is the national motto that appears on the obverse (front) of all Morgan silver dollars. Asumming it is a Morgan dollar. The value depends on the condition of the coin. 1887 is a common date for this series of U.S. silver dollars. Current average retail values for circulated coins are $30.00-$40.00.
The 1887s US coin in VF-20 list at$275.
The coin is a very common MORGAN dollar, circulated examples sell for $17.00-$26.00 depending on condition.
The first US dollar coin was struck in 1794.
Yes, it's worth money. How much money mainly depends on the coin's denomination, which you forgot to include in your question.
A 1887 Morgan Silver Dollar in fine condition (F12) is worth: $23.00. In a mint state of MS60, the value rises to: $40.00
The coin is worth about $14.00 as of today just for the silver, if it's in a collectible circulated condition, value is $17.00-$26.00. For Morgan dollars 1887 is a very common year.
Assuming the coin is circulated and has no mintmarks. It's a very common date, values run from $30.00 to $40.00 depending on the grade of the coin.