Regrettably, at this point in time, not much, if at all, above face value. I would recommend holding on to them and maybe passing them down through the family, who knows, maybe in 50 years they could double or triple in value, you never know.
It is worth a dollar unless it is uncirculated the it is worth 25 to 75 cents above face value. Most likely it is not uncirculated and is worth a dollar.
The series 1935 $1 silver certificate is an extremely common bill, not worth much above face value. In uncirculated condition, it might go for $5.
A 1900-S Morgan dollar is worth $25-30 in average condition and nearly $200 in uncirculated condition.
A star note would have a slight collector value above face value, but only if the bill is in crisp uncirculated condition. It's not old enough of a series to be worth more.
AU stands for "About Uncirculated" and is not a code it's a grade. If you mean a mintmark? If the coin has one it's on the reverse above the letters DO in DOLLAR.
It depends on the bill's condition and series. The series is a letter that may or may not appear next to the date 1950. The printed year is often kept the same for a particular design regardless of the actual year of issue, while the series letter is changed following the appointment of a new Treasurer (or much less often, Treasury Secretary). $50 notes for 1950 were issued in 6 series - no letter, and 1950A through 1950E. E-series notes can be worth $25 to $50 above face value if circulated, more if crisp uncirculated. The other 5 series are worth less, anywhere from face value to $25 above; again, more if crisp uncirculated.
Yes, it can be spent. To a collector, it might be worth a couple of dollars above face value.
It depends on the bill's condition and series. The series is a letter that may or may not appear next to the date 1950. The printed year is often kept the same for a particular design regardless of the actual year of issue, while the series letter is changed following the appointment of a new Treasurer (or much less often, Treasury Secretary). $50 notes for 1950 were issued in 6 series - no letter, and 1950A through 1950E. E-series notes can be worth $25 to $50 above face value if circulated, more if crisp uncirculated. The other 5 series are worth less, anywhere from face value to $25 above; again, more if crisp uncirculated. The demand for these is much less than the supply. Unless yours is an absolute gem crisp uncirculated note, you're not going to get any premium for it. If it's a gem, you might get $70-$80 if you can find an interested buyer.
There is no such thing as a "Morgan $2 bill". George T. Morgan designed coins, not bills. Most red seal $2 bills are worth only a few dollars above face value, although they can retail for higher prices if in uncirculated condtion. Given that situation, sequential serial numbers add little or nothing to their value.
The Eisenhower dollars from 1971-1978 struck for an taken from circulation have no silver and only have face value. Proof and special collectors coins sold from the Philadelphia Mint are the only coins of this series that are above face value
As of 02/2009, a circulated one might retail for all of $1 above face value regardless of the series letter.If it's uncirculated it might sell for about $25 but anyone buying it would pay wholesale; i.e. face value again.
The 1963-D Franklin Half is the last year issue and highest mintage of the series, only very high grade well struck uncirculated coins are valued above the silver content. average value is about $6.00 just for the silver.