Assuming the coin is circulated and has no mintmark, the 1882 Morgan dollar is common. The retail values are $30.00-$39.00 depending on condition. Values are a market average and only for coins in collectible condition, coins that are bent, corroded, scratched, used as jewelery or have been cleaned have far less value if any to a collector or dealer.
It's the first in the presidential dollar coin series, and it's worth one dollar. The coin is made of brass, not gold.
The coin is a common Sacagawea dollar coin and its worth a dollar.
A US dollar dated 1796 has values ranging from $1,000.00 to $15,000.00 in circulated condition
The U.S. Mint did not exist in the year 1717.
Assuming the coin is circulated and has no mintmarks, retail value is $26.00-$32.00 depending on how much wear the coin shows. The 1880 Morgan is a common date.
That's Sacagawea, not Pocahontas, and the coin is worth one dollar.
It is still worth 1 dollar
It's worth one dollar.
It's the first in the presidential dollar coin series, and it's worth one dollar. The coin is made of brass, not gold.
It's still worth one dollar.
If I understand the question, you have a Sacagawea dollar coin with no date on the obverse (front) of the coin and you think it should have a 2000 date on it? The coin was made after 2008. From 2009 to date, the year the coin was struck in is on the edge of the coin.
The year a coin was struck has nothing to do with the grade, it's how much wear the coin has, the more a coin is used the numbers, letter, portrait and rim get wore away.The highest parts of any coins design is the first to wear down, the farther down it wears it appears to get flatter and wider.This is how a coin is graded, the more wear it has the lower the grade.
The first year of issue for a Morgan dollar was 1878 please look at the coin again.
A US dollar dated 1796 has values ranging from $1,000.00 to $15,000.00 in circulated condition
The coin is a common Sacagawea dollar coin and its worth a dollar.
The U.S. Mint did not exist in the year 1717.
One dollar. They're not rare; there are millions of them sitting around in vaults.