1 - "Liberty"
2 - "In God We Trust"
3 - "United States of America"
4 - "E Pluribus Unum" (latin for "Out of Many, One")
5 - the denomination
6 - the year Note that the presidential dollars, as per the law authorizing their minting, do not have the word "Liberty" inscribed because "the use of a design bearing the likeness of the Statue of Liberty on the reverse of the coins issued under this subsection adequately conveys the concept of Liberty".
There are not necessarily six inscriptions on every coin.
The mint is the place where the coin was made. In the US there are several. If the coin has a D next to the date, it was minted in Denver. S is for San Francisco.
The Crown (Five Shillings) was a popular coin the later part of the 19th century. They were minted in every year from 1887 to 1900.
All coins have a date that they were minted, so by looking at the coin carefully, you will find the date the coin was minted.
Such a coin does not exist. The last British Halfcrown coin minted for circulation was minted in 1967. The last British Halfcrown Proof coin was minted in 1970.
The U.S. Mint has never produced a one troy ounce seated liberty coin. I can only deduce that you have a privately minted one ounce silver round that has a seated liberty design on it. These have been minted for decades and continue to be minted every year by private companies.
She was on many coins in 1972, including every circulating coin minted in Britain, Canada, and Australia.
You have described every British coin issued in 1797. Please provide the type of metal it appears to be made from, the diameter of the coin, the inscriptions and the design on the reverse.
There was no 1977 British One Pound coin minted. The first general circulation One Pound coins was minted in 1983.
That attempt is made, but mint errors do exist and they can add value for collectors.
Possibly a typo for a coin minted in 1773.
anywhere