Blue ink is characteristic of all 1935 US silver certificates (and most other years as well) except those printed for use in Hawaii and North Africa during WWII.
Note that the term is actually "seal" rather than stamp.
Please check again and post a new question. All 1935 $1 silver certificates have blue seals.
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. All 1935 D silver certificates had blue seals. The last red-seal $1 silver certificates were printed in 1896.
Please check again and post a new, separate question. No $2 bills were printed with the 1935 series date, and the last $2 silver certificates were printed in the 19th century.
It's an obsolete form of paper money called a silver certificate. Up till the mid-1960s silver certificates could be exchanged for a dollar's worth of silver. When the price of silver was deregulated the Treasury stopped issuing silver certificates and suspended their exchange for silver metal. Please see the Related Question for values.
The blue seal indicates your bill is a silver certificate, a form of paper money issued until the early 1960s. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1935 A US 1 dollar silver certificate?" for more information.
Please check again and post a new question. All 1935 $1 silver certificates have blue seals.
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. All 1935 D silver certificates had blue seals. The last red-seal $1 silver certificates were printed in 1896.
Please check again and post a new, separate question. No $2 bills were printed with the 1935 series date, and the last $2 silver certificates were printed in the 19th century.
It's an obsolete form of paper money called a silver certificate. Up till the mid-1960s silver certificates could be exchanged for a dollar's worth of silver. When the price of silver was deregulated the Treasury stopped issuing silver certificates and suspended their exchange for silver metal. Please see the Related Question for values.
Please check again and post a new question. All 1935 $1 silver certificates have blue seals. Bills with red seals are United States Notes and the last $1 US Notes were dated 1928.
Please check again and post a new question. All 1935 $1 silver certificates have blue seals. Bills with red seals are United States Notes and the last $1 US Notes were dated 1928.
The blue seal indicates your bill is a silver certificate, a form of paper money issued until the early 1960s. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1935 A US 1 dollar silver certificate?" for more information.
H is the highest series letter on 1935 $1 silver certificates. Please check your bill again and post a new question; the series letter if any is next to the date.
Silver certificates had BLUE seals, while red indicated the United States Note. The question as it stands cannot be answered.
you would need to give the denomination And take a second look at the bill. By 1935 seal colors were standardized and only U.S. Notes used red seals. Silver certificates had blue seals.
All 1934, 1935, and 1957-series $1 silver certificates had the same color scheme: serial numbers and the seal were in blue while the rest of the bill's front was black and white. The reverse side was almost identical to today's $1 bills, in green and white.
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. The only US bills dated 1935 were $1 silver certificates with blue seals. The last $1000 bills were 1934 Federal Reserve Notes with green seals.