lotta dings on that guy, I'd say its somewhere between VF and EF, and you'd probably its melt value out of it
i personally believe it is just a nice good ol' 22 peace dollar generally worth a couple bucks over melt
and with silver down a few bucks maybe 29 in a retail setting. 1921 morgan dollars and 1922 peace dollars are the most common silver dollars there is. it could bring a little premium because it is nice (ebay but ebay/paypal/shipping fees would knock it down) but in a real world scenario probably not.
That coin is just worth melt. Ordinary date, and not exceptional condition. One of the most common dates for Peace Dollars.
they would have to be uncirculated or have a carson city mint mark to be more valuable then a few bucks above melt
Thanks , that is amazing to me that something so old and in nice condition and silver could only be worth 20 dollar or so...
You have to remember that they made millions of them and they are still very plentiful in high grades.
and to think a couple years ago they were worth less a year or so ago they were worth more. it all depends on the price of silver. and like the other person said they made millions upon millions and the government held a lot of them intill the 60's
To a coin shop/show it's worth melt. Ebay you can get 5-10 plus over melt, but you'll pay some back in fees. People get a little crazy bidding up silver dollars on eBay.
Age does not always equal higher value. (however in my case, I consider myself a steal at any price) 2000 year old coins can be bought for $4 or $5.
1922 coin is termed as a Peace Dollar Coin. It is worth around $10-15 in good grade and around $25-30 in middle mint state. There were two categories in these 1922 coins, one was termed as 1922-S and the other one was termed as 1922-D
The categories, as you call them, are actually S=San Francisco Mint, and D=Denver Mint, and you forgot one, no mint mark which was Philadelphia. That's the location of the branch Mints where they were struck. The entire series, 1921 -1935, was called Peace Dollars.