No, The law was changed in 1968 and these bills can not be changed for silver. They are still worth the dollar value though
These bills were simply called silver certificates rather than silver "coin" certificates. Please see the Related Question for details.
You can take it to a coin dealer and have it appraised.
You can't, because it's not real. It's a novelty item sold in gift shops and similar places.
Yes ... but it's not a REAL certificate. It's a novelty item that sells for a couple of dollars.
It will always be redeemable for face value at any bank, but taking old currency to a bank isn't generally a good idea. Depending on condition, it may have added numismatic value. Take it to a local coin shop for an appraisal. They will have books which rate and value currency.
A silver certificate is paper currency. It is not a coin. No silver dollars were minted in 1943, and no silver certificates were printed with that date either.
Please check again and post a new question. The highest denomination silver coin in 1927 was $1. In fact, the U.S. never struck a silver $5 coin. There were $5 silver certificate bills but none are dated 1927.
what is the worth of a john elway coin
Depending on which edition it is (gold-plated or all silver) you can expect to pay anywhere between $400-$600 for the coin with original box and certificate from the Central Bank of Kuwait.
Trade dollars were US coins made in silver to trade in the far East. However, your coin, if it is an 1884 Trade Dollar, it is counterfeit. There were only 10 examples minted that year, all of them are known. So, when it comes to value, the only value your coin can have is if it is minted in real silver, if it is minted in real silver, it is worth however much silver is in your coin. If it is silver plated lead, or silver plated copper, or non-silver alloy like "nickel silver" your coin is essentially worthless.
These bills were simply called silver certificates rather than silver "coin" certificates. Please see the Related Question for details.
You can take it to a coin dealer and have it appraised.
You can't, because it's not real. It's a novelty item sold in gift shops and similar places.
No general circulation British coin contains any silver. If you have any modern British coin with a silver content, it will say so on the packaging it was sold in. This will include the percentage of silver and very possibly, a "certificate of authenticity".
This depends on if it is a Morgan or Trade dollar.
A genuine silver coin produced by the Royal Mint will be in protective packaging indicating what the coin is made from. It should also include a certificate of authenticity.
go to a coin dealer or the bank. The coin dealer will pay more. the bank will only pay face value.