There are many sites that give values. You can also go to a bookstore and buy a copy of a magazine such as Coin Prices or Banknote Reporter.
Two sites that I use a lot are
http://www.uscurrencyauctions.com/prices
http://www.numismedia.com/fmv/fmv.shtml
The price for civil war coins varies, you can find on eBay coins that cost a couple of hundreds of dollar up to thousands of dollar. You can also participate in auctions and try to get the best price.
It depends on where you are right now; try to find a bank.
Bills have series, coins have mint marks. Please see the Related Question for more.
you can find it ABOVE the DO in dollar on the back
See the link below. There is a category specifically for coins and currency that makes it a lot easier to find questions about, well, coins and currency. Checking accounts are only indirectly related to collectible bills.
Go to homeschoolmath or Biglearners dot com site . You can find of generator makes worksheets for counting coins and bills. You can choose to include or not include the penny, nickel, dime, quarter, half-dollar, one-dollar bill, five-dollar bill, and ten-dollar bill.
See the link below. There is a category specifically for coins and currency that makes it a lot easier to find questions about, well, coins and currency. Checking accounts are only indirectly related to collectible bills.
A dealer in collectable coins and bills. That is a US Note, and has not been printed in a number of years. It is different from the standard Federal Reserve note.
Quite simply, there were no US dollar coins minted that year.
1 coin= $1 dollar piece 2 coins= 2 $0.50 pieces and so on. The least number of coins impossible to go into a dollar is 77 coins.
To find a "numismatic value" of a Morgan Silver Dollar, you need to know the coin's mint mark and condition. There are various online price guides. The silver content of these coins is about 3/4 ounce, making most worn coins more valuable for their metal content (multiply the spot price of an ounce of silver by 0.75). In 2011, when silver was as high as $48 an ounce, dollar coins brought in more than $36. By 2018, the coins had fallen to about $12
Most banks and credit unions have the coins.