One of the best places to gauge the actual market value of an item is Ebay. What something is worth, and what someone is prepared to pay for it can be two vastly different things. A quick browse on Ebay shows 1964 crowns fetching about $8.00. Of course, if there is something special about a coin such as proof, frosted cameo or anything that would add to its rareness or desirability, that can raise the price dramatically.
As it contains 0.3636 troy ounces of silver, its "melt value" is about US$6 (at November 2009's $17/troy ounce silver). Numismatically, it's worth perhaps $8 in Uncirculated condition and $10 in Proof.
1959 Bermuda Crown: On a purely Scrap silver basis at today's silver price (27/03/2013) its £15.89 (28.28g of .925 Ag).The 1964 Bermuda Crown is £6.87 (22.62g of 50% silver).Obviously collectors may pay much more for coins in good condition.
Bermuda's dollar is tied to the U.S. dollar, so unless your coin is an uncirculated or proof strike, it's worth $1 in either currency.
It's worth about 2 cents for the copper.
The half-crown and crown are obsolete British coins. Under the old pre-decimal system, one crown was worth five shillings, and the half-crown was worth half that. At twenty shillings to the pound, the crown was 1/4 and the half was 1/8 of a pound. Or, the crown was 60 pence and the half was 30 pence.
They're worth one cent.Specific pennies from 1964 or earlier could be worth considerably more to a collector, but you'd really need to take them to one to get an estimate. The value depends on the details and the condition of the coin.
I don't know what the actual gold is worth, but I recently had one made and fitted and the whole procedure cost a pricey AUS $1350.
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One US dollar is worth about 6.5 Swedish crowns.
Five. A sixpence (when they were in use, up to about 1970) was worth half a shilling. A crown = five shilling, so a half-crown = 2 and a half shillings.
Bermuda's currency is linked to the US dollar. The coins are the same size and value as US coins and exchange one-for-one, so a Bermudan quarter is worth the same as a US quarter.
one cent
1964 was the last year for silver quarters. At current market prices, one is worth about $5.