The U.S. never issued a $1 million bill of any type.
The highest denomination ever printed was a special $100,000 gold certificate that was used for moving large amounts of money between government departments back in the days before electronic transfers were possible.
Silver certificates don't have Federal Reserve letters or numbers because they were issued directly by the Treasury, not through the Federal Reserve system.
They were first issued in 1886.
Please see the question "What is the value of an 1899 US 2 dollar silver certificate?"The Federal Reserve System wasn't established until 1914.Silver certificates were issued directly by the Treasury and weren't connected to the Federal Reserve Bank.
Only Federal Reserve Notes have seals. Silver certificates were issued directly by the Treasury. Please see the Related Question for more information.
No. The last silver 1 dollar coin was issued in 1935.
Silver certificates don't have district letters. Like United States Notes, they were issued directly through the Treasury and not via the Federal Reserve System.
No, there were no $10,000 silver certificates Moreover, silver certificates were never issued by the Federal Reserve System. They were issued directly by the US Treasury.
Please check your bill again. Federally issued 1890-series $1000 bills were printed as US Treasury Notes, not silver certificates. If that's what you have you should get a professional appraisal to ensure that the bill is genuine. 1890 Treasury Notes are considered to be extremely rare and there are many fakes.
The value of the 5 dollar 1936 silver certificate is not available because there was no certificate of this denomination issued in 1936. The certificate is most likely a fake.
The first silver certificates were issued in 1878, and included all denominations from $10 to $1,000. Lower-denomination silver certificates were issued starting in 1886.
The US Treasury would exchange them for silver coins. That policy ended in the mid-1960s when silver coinage was discontinued.
There were no federally-issued silver certificates with that date, only Treasury Notes. You may have one of those or a privately-issued bill. Please check again and post a new, separate question with more information that could help ID the bill. You don't have to include the serial number as that rarely helps to identify a bill.