Silver certificates issued from 1928 to 1957 are easy to identify. They have distinctive blue seals and serial numbers, and the words "Silver Certificate" are across the top of the bill's front.
Older bills may or may not say "Silver Certificate", but will have some reference to "Payable in silver", "Redeemable in Silver Coin", or similar phrasing.
There is no such thing as a 1989 $1 Silver Certificate.
The oldest dollar bill is a 1935 Silver Certificate.
Check that bill again. There was no $1 silver certificate dated 1931.
The oldest dollar bill is a 1935 Silver Certificate.
A silver certificate is a US banknote (bill) that could be redeemed for an equivalent amount of silver. Please see the question "What is a silver certificate?" for a much more detailed explanation.
A silver certificate is a US banknote (bill) that could be redeemed for an equivalent amount of silver. Please see the question "What is a silver certificate?" for a much more detailed explanation.
If you mean a $5.00 silver certificate a crisp an well centered bill about $12.00 to $15.00.
About $1.25
45.00
It not on the bill
$10 silver certificate bill.
There's no way to know for sure without knowing the bill's series year.