Your bill retails for about $45 in worn condition, up to maybe $75 in better condition.
To explain what you have, at the start of WW2 the government took many bills from the 1934 and 1935 series and overprinted them with Hawaii. They were shipped to that territory to replace ordinary bills so that they could be declared worthless in the event of a Japanese invasion. The fear was that if the Imperial Army captured a lot of ordinary U.S. currency they could use it to buy weapons as well as making counterfeit copies.
Please check again. The last series year for US $1000 bills was 1934. Only $1 silver certificates were printed with a 1935 date.
In 1857, 1000 of anything was worth exactly 1000.
The last series year for $500 bills was 1934. If that's what you have current retail is $600 - $1000 depending on how worn the bill is.
1000 Dollars
Depending on condition, $600 to $1000. It's not necessary to copy a bill's serial number. That's just a counter and rarely affects its value or helps to ID it.
1000
$1000
100-1000
100-1000 USD
$ 150. to $1000
100-1000 usd
0-1000 USD depending on EXACTLY what you have and its condition.
100-1000 depending on specifics
http://www.treasurydirect.gov/BC/SBCPrice
10-1000 usd
100-1000
it is pure silver