As of September 2012, the limited edition Wayne Gretzky retirement medallion has a value of $200usd.
Most of those are commemorative 'rip-offs' and have little or no value to anyone but a MacArthur collectors
For a true Cowboy fan $1200...For an Eagles fan $4.95.
In like-new, unfired condition, around $1.600- $1,700. Any commemorative firearm drops sharply in value if used. That rifle is the Weatherby Mark V.
Considered a privately minted silver art round, it's value will basically only be for the silver it contains -- currently about $28. An interested art bar collector may pay you a premium of a few dollars to add it to their collection.DanUser:WorkingMan
Commemorative circulation coins were not issued in Queen Victoria's day. Crown coins issued from late 1887 to 1892 have what is known as the "Jubilee" bust of Queen Victoria. It is very possible that you have a commemorative medallion or some other type of souvenir of the occasion.
Since this isn't a legal tender coin, but rather a commemorative medallion, it holds no numismatic value. If the medallion is truly gold, then it definitely has some intrinsic value in metal content, but more than likely it's bronze or brass. In that case, it may have some value with collectors of race memorabilia.
Please check your coin. 1897 was the year of Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee or 60th year on the throne. Sixpences were not issued as commemorative coins. You may have a Sixpence like souvenir token or medallion.
The Silver Anniversary Dallas Cowboys medallion is worth a price close to $75. If you have one that is unopened, it will most likely be worth more money.
You have a commemorative souvenir token or medallion, probably made from bronze, issued for the occasion of the Coroantion of Queen Elizabeth II in 1953. If it has any collector value at all, it will not be very much.
There's no such coin. There were no US Coins in 1776 and the Mint didn't make any special coins for the 1876 centennial.If you're referring to double-date coins from the BIcentennial (200 years) in 1976, please see the Related Questions.
A 1976 commemorative Montreal olympic coin weighs 48.6000 grams and is made of .925 silver. If you do a little bit of math, that works out to be 1.4454 troy ounces of silver per coin. The price of silver is constantly changing. Its value at this minute is $13.25 per ounce. In terms of silver value, a 1976 Montreal silver commemorative coin is worth $19.15.