No. Sell them for the collector value then buy silver!
MoreThe government stopped redeeming silver certificates for silver metal in 1968, after the price of silver was deregulated.The collector value of a silver certificate depends on several factors, among others:
> Its denomination
> How worn it is
> Its date
> The letter, if any, next to the date
> Its seal color (sometimes - usually it's blue but some bills have other colors)
WikiAnswers already has specific values for most common silver certificates. Look for questions in the form "What is the value of a (date) US (amount) dollar silver certificate?"; for example "What is the value of a 1953 US 5 dollar silver certificate?"
Is dollywoodd silver collar city a publicly traded company
the Chinese traded silk for gold, silver and precious pebbles.
Indian
No.
traded from blue &/or red
silver and gold
The first $1 U.S. silver certificates were introduced in 1886. No certificates have been redeemable for silver since 1968.
No US paper money has silver IN it; all bills are printed on special paper that's mostly cotton and linen. If you're asking if the bills were silver certificates - i.e. could be traded for silver at that time - the answer is again no. All 1950 $10 bills were issued as familiar green-seal Federal Reserve Notes.
Silver certificates are a form of representative money used in place of actual physical silver, you can buy them on ebay.
The Silver Spoon - 1934 is rated/received certificates of: UK:A
The Silver Lining - 1919 is rated/received certificates of: UK:U
The Silver Trail - 1937 is rated/received certificates of: USA:Approved