Us Silver Dollar

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  2. Us Silver Dollar 1921
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  • Silver dollars are extremely popular with collectors. They are large, heavy, and impressive coins to hold in your hand. The US doesn’t make any coin nearly as impactful or cherished as the old silver dollars that used to be a part of everyday life many decades ago.
  • Silver Rounds (Christmas, etc.), 1 oz. Copper Rounds, US Dollars (1794 1839 measure to make sure), Standard Casino Chips: 40.6mm – Coin Capsules Box of 25: American Silver Eagle (ASE) Dollar, US Silver Dollars (1794 1839 measure to make sure), Commemorative Gold $50, 1 oz. Silver Buffalo: 42 mm – Coin Capsules Box of 25.

In 2021, the United States Mint will mint silver dollars with proof and uncirculated finishes to commemorate the life of Christa McAuliffe, a social studies teacher selected in 1985 to be the first participant in NASA's Teacher in Space Program.

Silver dollars are extremely popular with collectors. They are large, heavy, and impressive coins to hold in your hand. The US doesn’t make any coin nearly as impactful or cherished as the old silver dollars that used to be a part of everyday life many decades ago. Our guide covers silver dollar coins issued by The United States from 1794 up until 1935. We have information and value data for one dollar coins worth anywhere from $15 to $10,000,000, and just about every price point in between. You will learn how the condition (aka grade) of a coin greatly affects its value and desirability. You will also learn how mintmarks and other small variations can make two seemingly similar coins be worth vastly different amounts.

If you are looking to sell silver dollars then it will be important to determine if you have a desirable collector coin or if most of the value is based in the coin’s bullion value derived from its silver content. As a quick tip, most Morgan and Peace dollars from 1878 and newer will be worth just a small premium over their silver value. However, never make the mistake of selling a dollar coin from 1877 or older just for silver. Those types of coins always have a collector value.

The United States Mint has minted over 20 different kinds of coins, of many different sizes. Often, it is difficult for people to get a grasp of what much of the historical coinage looked like, at least in relation to modern circulating coins. This chart shows all of the coin types, and their sizes, grouped by coins of similar size and by general composition.[1]

Seven distinct types of coin composition have been used over the past 200 years: three base coin alloys, two silver alloys, gold, and in recent years, platinum and palladium. The base metal coins were generally alloys of copper (for 2 cent coins and lower), and copper/nickel (for 3 and 5 cent coins). Copper/nickel composition is also used for all modern 'silver' coins.[2]

US Coin Sizes and Composition
Steel AlloyCopperCopper AlloySilver AlloySilverGoldPlatinumPalladium
Three Cent
14 mm
0.8 g
0.750 fine
1851–1853
14 mm
0.75 g
0.900 fine
1854–1873
Half Dime
15.5 mm
1.24 g
1794–1873
Dollar
15 mm
1.67 gr
1849–1889
$5 American Gold Eagle
16.5 mm
3.11 g
1986–present
$10 American Platinum Eagle
16.5 mm
3.11 g
1997–present
Three Cent
17.9 mm
1.94 g
1865-1889
Dime (Clad)
17.91 mm
2.268 g
1965–present
Dime
17.9 mm
2.5 g
1796–1964
$2.50 Gold Quarter Eagle
18 mm
4.2 g
1796–1929
Small Cent
19.05 mm
2.5 g
1943
Small Cent
19.05 mm
3.11 g
1864-1982
Small Cent
19.05 mm
4.67 g
1856-1864
2.5 g
1982–present
Three Dollar
20.5 mm
5.01 g
1853–1876
Nickel
21.21 mm
5 g
1866–present
Nickel
21.21 mm
5 g
1942–1945
Twenty Cent
22 mm
5 g
1875–1878
$5 Half Eagle
21.6 mm
8.36 g
1795–1929
$10 American Gold Eagle
22 mm
7.78 g
1986–present
$25 American Platinum Eagle
22 mm
7.78 g
1997–present
Half Cent
23.5 mm
6.74 g
1795–1857
Two Cent
23 mm
6.22 g
1864-1873
Quarter (Clad)
24.26 mm
5.67 g
1965–present
Quarter (40% Ag)
24.3 mm
5.75 g
1976(S)
Quarter
24.3 mm
6.25 g
1796–1964
Dollar
26.5 mm
8.1 g
1979–Present[3]
$10 Eagle
27 mm
17.5 g
1795–1933
$25 American Gold Eagle
27 mm
17.5 g
1986–present
$50 American Platinum Eagle
27 mm
15.6 g
1997–present
Large Cent
29 mm
10.89 g
1793–1857
Half Dollar (Clad)
30.61 mm
11.34 g
1971–present
Half Dollar (40% Ag)
30.6 mm
11.5 g
1965–1970, 1976(S)
Half Dollar
30.6 mm
12.5 g
1796–1964
$50 American Gold Eagle
32.7 mm
31.1 g
1986–present
$100 American Platinum Eagle
32.7 mm
31.1 g
1997–present
$20 Double Eagle
34 mm
35 g
1849–1933
$25 American Palladium Eagle
34.036 mm
31.120 g
2017–present
Dollar (Clad)
38.1 mm
22.68 g
1971–1978
Dollar (40% Ag)
38.1 mm
24.59 g
1971(S)-1976(S)
Dollar
38.1 mm
26.73 g
1794–1964
$1 American Silver Eagle
40.6 mm
31.1 g
1986–present
Representative images of US coin sizes
Steel AlloyCopperCopper AlloySilver AlloySilverGoldPlatinumPalladium

Cheapest Place To Buy Silver

Notes on the tables:

Dollar

Us Silver Dollar 1921

  • Images are close to actual size on a 92-dpi monitor.
  • Clad Half Dollars, Silver Half Dollars and Dollars, and Gold Half Eagles and Eagles are still regularly minted as commemorative coins. Dimes, quarters and half dollars are also struck in 90% silver for special annual collector's sets.
  • The silver-colored Susan B. Anthony dollar was replaced with gold-colored Sacagawea Dollar in 2000 and Presidential Dollars 2007-2016; though the composition changed, the coin's size and weight remain the same.
  • Some variances in coin size and weight occurred over time, especially as the value of silver varied. In particular, many silver coins changed in the 1870s. The figures cited in the tables are representative of the series, and are generally the latest, or most common, figures for a given coin type.

The largest coin ever minted by the US Mint was a gold 'Half Union' pattern in 1877, weighing 83.45 grams, and 51.1 mm in diameter. The largest coin actually issued by the mint was the Panama-Pacific Exposition $50 gold commemorative, at 83.572 grams and 44 mm. An octagonal version of the coin was slightly larger, measuring 45 mm at its widest point.

Us silver dollar values 1800-2000

References[edit]

Us Silver Dollar

Us Silver Dollars For Sale

Silver dollar price guide

Us Silver Dollar Designs

  1. ^'The United States Mint: Frequently Asked Questions'. Archived from the original on 28 March 2010. Retrieved 24 March 2010.
  2. ^'Coin Composition, Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta'. Archived from the original on 8 June 2010. Retrieved 24 March 2010.
  3. ^'Native American $1 Coin'. Retrieved 25 March 2016.
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