It depends on the condition of the note, such factors as folds, creases, staining, tears, separation, etc. and the signatures on the front of the note.
An 1899 silver certificate is worth around $40 if in good condition. It can as high as $250 if perfect condition.
As of 9/11 they are worth $45 to $150 in circulated condition. In uncirculated condition they are worth $200 or more.
the certificate K57481719A worth 1 dollar of silver this mean about 1 tenth of an ounce at a spot price of 10$/ounce the certificate should have been used before since with inflation 1 dollar buy alot less silver then it used to buy in 1899
A Silver Certificate value depends on different factors, such as the year, denomination, condition. Most uncirculated Silver Certificates are worth approximately two to four times their face value.
It depends on the condition of the note, such factors as folds, creases, staining, tears, separation, etc. and the signatures on the front of the note.
An 1899 silver certificate is worth around $40 if in good condition. It can as high as $250 if perfect condition.
See the attached link
As of 9/11 they are worth $45 to $150 in circulated condition. In uncirculated condition they are worth $200 or more.
Your bill is an 1899 $5 silver certificate. Please see the question "What is the value of an 1899 US 5 dollar silver certificate?" for more details.
From $15 to $360, depending on the signatures and especially on the condition.
the certificate K57481719A worth 1 dollar of silver this mean about 1 tenth of an ounce at a spot price of 10$/ounce the certificate should have been used before since with inflation 1 dollar buy alot less silver then it used to buy in 1899
Copies are rarely worth much more than the paper they're printed on.
There were no series letters on 1899 $2 silver certificates. Please see the question "What is the value of an 1899 US 2 dollar silver certificate" for values and other information.
A Silver Certificate value depends on different factors, such as the year, denomination, condition. Most uncirculated Silver Certificates are worth approximately two to four times their face value.
Poor grade is worth around $50 and excellent condition is worth around $250. So it would be safe to say that fine is worth between $100-$150.
It depends on the condition of the note, such factors as folds, creases, staining, tears, separation, etc. and the signatures on the front of the note.
The Chief 1899 $5 dollar silver certificate is paper money.