Very definitely. 1953 US $5 bills were issued in seven combinations:
No. Red-seal $2 notes were printed in the 1917, 1928, and 1953 series.
The denomination of any and all Dollar notes is One Dollar.
1953 red print two dollar bills can be broken up into four different types by signature combination: 1953 - Ivy Baker Priest (Treasurer of The United States) and G.M. Humphrey (Secretary of the Treasury) 1953A - Ivy Baker Priest and Robert B Anderson 1953B - Elizabeth Rudel Smith and C. Douglas Dillon 1953C - Kathryn O'Hay Granahan and C. Douglas Dillon All the different 1953 red seal two dollar bills are equally common. In average condition any 1953 red print $2 should sell for about $2.50 to a dealer or collector. If you have a run of 100 consecutive red writing two dollar bills, expect about $8 per note. The same $8 applies to smaller runs of consecutive notes. Red seal two dollar bills from 1953 are frequently encountered with a star at the beginning of the serial number. 1953 $2 star notes typically sell for about $5 if they are in decent condition. Expect about $15 if they are uncirculated. Across the four different types of 1953 red seal two dollar bills there were 79,920,000 notes printed. An additional 3,960,000 1953 star notes were printed. You can see why 1953 two dollar bills aren't rare today and why they will never be rare.
If there were any one trillion dollar notes, then 50 of them would be worth 50 trillion dollars.
"B" is the highest series letter for 1953 $5 US Notes. The series letter if any is next to the date; please check your bill again and post a new, separate question.
The U.S. did not issue any $5 notes with that date. If you have a 1953 $5 silvercertificate it would retail for face value up to maybe $8 depending on condition.
The U.S. did not print any $2 notes with that date. If you accidentally inverted the numbers and meant 1953-A, your bill is worth about $2.50 to $5.00 depending on condition.
No $1 notes were printed with that date. Please check again, then post a new question with the denomination and date, and what letter if any is next to the date. You do not have to post the serial number.
The U.S. did not issue any $2 notes of any type with that date. There were $1 notes with the date 1957; these are common among collectors and retail for about $1.50. There were $2 notes with the date 1953. They have a red seal and are U.S. Notes, not silver certificates. Value is $2.25 to $6.00 depending on condition and series letter. No $2 bills were printed in 1957. Please check again and post a new question.
The mintmark if any will be right above the bell.
Any school-retailer, or general store should carry "stick-it", or post-it notes. This can be, Dollarama, Dollar-Tree, Staples, Wal-Mart, Dollar-Value, 99cent store, or any cheap-product retailer.
The U.S. did not issue any $5 notes with that date.