All US bills from the 1920s onward carry a "series" date but not the actual printing date. The series date is in roughly the same place on all bills, normally to the right of the portrait.
Determining roughly when a $1 silver certificate was printed can be slightly difficult. Up till the 1970s, the Treasury tended to change series dates only when a bill was redesigned, and the 1935 series used the same design from its introduction until it was discontinued some thirty years later! Here's a list of approximate printing dates, based on the letter next to the year:
1935, 1935A : 01/1935 - 07/1945
1935B : 07/1945 - 07/1946
1935C : 07/1946 - 05/1949
1935D : 06/1949 - 01/1953
1935E : 01/1953 - 07/1957
1935F, 1957 : 07/1957 - 01/1961
1935G, 1957 A : 01/1961 - 04/1962
1935H, 1957B 01/1963 - 03/1965
Blue-seal $1 silver certificates were printed from the 1899 series to the 1957 series. You need to know the bill's date, condition, and whether there is a letter after the date.
You have to know its denomination, its date, and whether it has a series letter next to the date. There are numerous on-line price guides, or you could always check the prices posted here at Answers.com. Most common bill prices have already been posted - phrase your question in the form "What is the value of a <date> US <denomination> silver certificate?" For example, "What is the value of a 1957 A US 1 dollar silver certificate?"
More information is needed. You need to know the bill's date, condition, and whether it has a small letter next to the date. Then check a site such as the one linked below for a range of values.
You need to know its condition as well as the series letter, if any, after the date. See the related link below for values.
Didn't know there was one of that date
If you mean can I get a silver dollar for it from a bank? or a federal reserve? They stopped that in 1969. Late-date silver certificate bills (e.g. 1957 $1 bills) are common among collectors so they rarely sell for much more than face value. However some older ones can be worth more, but you need to know the bill's date, series letter, and denomination to determine its value.
eBay.MoreYou need to know the bill's date, condition, and series letter (next to the date). Many later-date silver certificates are only worth a few dollars so you'll need to weigh the cost of selling it versus whatever profit you'll make.
There's no way to know for sure without knowing the bill's series year.
I dont know what you have there but it did not come from the U.S. B.E.P.
It would be helpful to know the Country, Date and Condition of the note in question. If you are talking about a US $10 silver certificate, you might also look for a little "Series" letter next to the date. With that someone might have an idea what sort of 10 dollar bill you are talking about. Otherwise it is hard to make any sense of your question.
yes i have 1895 cc Morgan silver dollar.
do you know how much money a silver 1872 dollar coin is and a 1922 silver dollar coin