There were:
35,256,000 1 dollar bills printed ( Were Silver Certificates)
9,416,000 5 dollar bills printed ( Were Federal Reserve notes)
10,424,000 10 dollar bills printed ( Were Federal Reserve Notes)
11,300,500 20 dollar bills printed (Were Federal Reserve Notes)
In total there were 66,396,500 bills printed for Hawaii.
$100 silver certificates were only printed in 3 series: 1878, 1880, and 1891. Very few of them survive today and are considered to be very rare to extremely rare, with retail prices of many thousands of dollars depending on a bill's date and condition. Even though all denominations from $1 to $1000 were printed as silver certificates at one point or another, bills of $20 and above were mostly issued as other forms of currency.
$5 silver certificates were printed with the dates 1886, 1891, 1896, 1899, 1923, 1934, and 1953. $10 silver certificates were printed with the dates 1878, 1880, 1886, 1891, 1908, 1933, 1934, and 1953. However those are what are called "series" dates; printing actually went on during many intervening years but the series date wasn't changed.
There were many different series years for $1 silver certificates, plus bills were printed during intermediate years but using the same series date.Base series dates include 1886, 1891, 1896, 1899, 1923, 1928, 1935, and 1957. The latter 3 dates include numerous series letters: up to E for 1928, H for 1935, and B for 1957.If you include other denominations that were also printed as silver certificates the list becomes very long and complicated, especially for bills printed in the 19th century. Small-size silver certificates from the 20th century are less extensive because only two other denominations were printed:$5: 1934, series letters up to D; 1953, up to C$10: 1933; 1934 up to D, 1953, up to B
The answer is a very definite no. Silver certificates were only one of many different types of currency issued until the middle of the 20th century. Some of the more common ones wereDemand notesUnited States notesGold certificatesNational Bank notesTreasury notesFederal Reserve Bank notes (which were different from Federal Reserve notes)National Currency notesMost denominations of silver certificates were only printed during a limited time in the 19th century. Only $1, $5, and $10 silver certificates continued into the 20th century.
What you're referring to is actually called a silver certificate. Silver certificates were printed from 1886 to the early 1960s in many denominations, so more information is needed. Please post a new, separate question with the bill's denomination, date, and what letter if any is next to the date. You don't need to copy the serial number though.
None. The last silver certificates of any type were $1 bill printed in the 1957 series, and the only $500 silver certificates were printed during the 19th century.
They were never "minted" because that term only applies to coins. Bills are printed, like books or magazines.Series dates for $20 silver certificates are all in the 19th century: 1878, 1880, 1886, and 1891. Many different types of $20 bills were printed after that but none were silver certificates.
About $1.25 to $1.50. Many of these bills were saved because they were the last $1 silver certificates printed, so they're quite common among collectors.
$100 silver certificates were only printed in 3 series: 1878, 1880, and 1891. Very few of them survive today and are considered to be very rare to extremely rare, with retail prices of many thousands of dollars depending on a bill's date and condition. Even though all denominations from $1 to $1000 were printed as silver certificates at one point or another, bills of $20 and above were mostly issued as other forms of currency.
Yes, quite a few different varieties were printed in the 1934 series. Of course, because US bill "series" extend over a number of years many bills dated 1934 were actually printed much later. Denominations, series letters and special issues were: $1 - only one series, no letter $5 - no letter and A-D; special bills for Hawaii and North Africa during WWII $10 - same as $5
$5 silver certificates were printed with the dates 1886, 1891, 1896, 1899, 1923, 1934, and 1953. $10 silver certificates were printed with the dates 1878, 1880, 1886, 1891, 1908, 1933, 1934, and 1953. However those are what are called "series" dates; printing actually went on during many intervening years but the series date wasn't changed.
There were many different series years for $1 silver certificates, plus bills were printed during intermediate years but using the same series date.Base series dates include 1886, 1891, 1896, 1899, 1923, 1928, 1935, and 1957. The latter 3 dates include numerous series letters: up to E for 1928, H for 1935, and B for 1957.If you include other denominations that were also printed as silver certificates the list becomes very long and complicated, especially for bills printed in the 19th century. Small-size silver certificates from the 20th century are less extensive because only two other denominations were printed:$5: 1934, series letters up to D; 1953, up to C$10: 1933; 1934 up to D, 1953, up to B
No. 1957 silver certificates were printed in large numbers and many were saved when silver certificates were discontinued only a few years later, so most of them have only a small extra value. Please see the Related Question for more information.
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US silver certificates were printed for nearly 100 years in many denominations, so a complete accounting is beyond the scope of a wiki-style answer. The most common bills that would have circulated up till the 1960s would include:$1: 1928, 1934, 1935, and 1957$5: 1934, 1953$10: 1934, 1953These are of course "series dates" so bills with a specific date might be printed for years until a new series was started. For example, the last 1935-series $1 bills were printed in the early 1960s!
The answer is a very definite no. Silver certificates were only one of many different types of currency issued until the middle of the 20th century. Some of the more common ones wereDemand notesUnited States notesGold certificatesNational Bank notesTreasury notesFederal Reserve Bank notes (which were different from Federal Reserve notes)National Currency notesMost denominations of silver certificates were only printed during a limited time in the 19th century. Only $1, $5, and $10 silver certificates continued into the 20th century.
When silver certificates were originally issued the government controlled the price of silver and had a large hoard in various locations as backing for currency. Only as many silver certificates could be printed as there was silver to back them up, so it was a way of controlling the amount of money in circulation and holding down inflation. Citizens were allowed to take silver certificates to banks and some government offices where they could be exchanged for an equivalent amount of metal. As the economy changed they only became exchangeable for silver coins, which made them effectively the same as other kinds of paper currency except that they still had to be backed by silver. By the 1960s market pressure on silver (much from the electronic and photography industries) forced the government to deregulate its price and start selling its hoard. They stopped printing silver certificates and abandoned the policy of exchanging them for metal. By 1963 all U.S. currency printed was either Federal Reserve or U.S. Notes, which were not backed by any metal in the Treasury. U.S. Notes were discontinued shortly after that, around 1966 because they were entirely equivalent to FRN's.