Given so many details, it's unfortunate that I have to tell you that there's no such bill.
> The last $100 silver certificates were in the 1891 series.
> No US bills of any denomination were printed with the date 1952.
> The most recent series of $100 bills that had an E series letter was 1950 and these were green-seal Federal Reserve Notes.
Please check again and post a new question.
More information is needed - date, series letter (if there is one), condition, and if possible a brief description of the images on the bill.
You need to know its condition as well as the series letter, if any, after the date. See the related link below for values.
B is the highest series letter on a 1957 $1 silver certificate, so you may be looking at a plate indicator or some other marking. In any case 1957 $1 SC's are not rare; in average condition they generally retail in the $1.25 to $2.00 range regardless of series letter.
B is the highest series letter on a 1957 $1 silver certificate, so you may be looking at a plate indicator or some other marking. In any case 1957 $1 SC's are not rare; in average condition they generally retail in the $1.25 to $2.00 range regardless of series letter.
The US printed bills with that series date from 1935 to 1965. Most are only worth between $1.50 and $2.00 in average condition, but exact values depend on what letter if any is next to the date. Please see the questions "What is the value of a 1935 [letter] US 1 dollar silver certificate?" for more information.
More information is needed - date, series letter (if there is one), condition, and if possible a brief description of the images on the bill.
It depends on its date and condition. Please post a new, separate question with the bill's date and what letter, if any, is next to the date.
You need to know its condition as well as the series letter, if any, after the date. See the related link below for values.
Please post a new question with more information. A bill's serial number is normally not important in determining its value. The bill's condition, date, series letter (if any) and condition are what matter.
You need to provide the date (including any letter after the date) and an idea of the bill's condition - still crisp? worn? folded? torn? etc.
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.
$1.25 or so, if in average condition. Please note that a bill's serial number almost never affects its worth. The date, series letter, and condition are the major factors determining value.
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.
B is the highest series letter on a 1957 $1 silver certificate, so you may be looking at a plate indicator or some other marking. In any case 1957 $1 SC's are not rare; in average condition they generally retail in the $1.25 to $2.00 range regardless of series letter.
B is the highest series letter on a 1957 $1 silver certificate, so you may be looking at a plate indicator or some other marking. In any case 1957 $1 SC's are not rare; in average condition they generally retail in the $1.25 to $2.00 range regardless of series letter.
The US printed bills with that series date from 1935 to 1965. Most are only worth between $1.50 and $2.00 in average condition, but exact values depend on what letter if any is next to the date. Please see the questions "What is the value of a 1935 [letter] US 1 dollar silver certificate?" for more information.
$6 to $9 in average condition. Please note that a bill's serial number almost never affects its worth. The date, series letter, and condition are the major factors determining value.