it might be
i never seen one
Right in front of the right claw along the edge.
About $2.
it should say it on the right
A series 1935C silver certificate in choice, crisp uncirculated condition is worth $ 30.00, but one in fair condition is worth approx. $7.00.
Is this a rare or normal silver certificate?
Please check again and post a new question. $1 silver certificates were not printed with that date.
If the coin is a U.S. silver dollar dated 1896, it's a Morgan dollar and miss Liberty looks to the left, not the right. But a 1896 Barber half dollar faces the right. Look at the coin again and post new question.
First answerI don't assume to answer definitively for all Silver Certificates, but for the three (3) that I have in front of me right now, the answer is "No" the words "federal reserve note" do not appear anywhere on either the front of back side. The Silver Certificates I'm looking at are all One Dollar ($1.00) denomination, one each from Series 1957, Series 1957 A, and Series 1957 B.Final answerSilver certificates were issued directly by the Treasury while Federal Reserve Notes, as their name implies, are issued by the Federal Reserve System. The two types of bills are separate and distinct, so the answer is a definitive no.
1957 $1 bills are silver certificates. In the old days, you could trade that dollar for $1 worth of silver, or silver dollars. Right now, you can sell them or keep it.
A dollarThat doesn't sound right
$1 silver certificates were printed from 1891 to 1957 with multiple series and sub-series, so much more information is needed.Please post a new question with the bill's date and what letter, if any, is right next to the date. It's not necessary to copy the serial number.
It should be very clear to see, right on the front above the "R" in the word DOLLAR at the bottom of the bill's front.