Yes. The following denominations and types were printed. Even though the bills were printed during WWII, dates on bills changed must less often at the time so 1934 and 1935 are not mistakes.
Silver Certificates
brown seal for use in Hawaii:
Federal Reserve Notes
brown seal for use in Hawaii:yellow seal for use in North Africa:
Except for certain wartime bills, all silver certificates issued from 1928 to 1957 had blue seals. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1957 B US 1 dollar silver certificate?" for more information.
The U.S. did not print any bills dated 1956.
It depends greatly on the year and condition. But all of them are worth at least a dollar or so over face.
The US Treasury would exchange them for silver coins. That policy ended in the mid-1960s when silver coinage was discontinued.
The U.S. didn't print any silver certificate bills dated 1930. Please check again and post a new question.
No, The law was changed in 1968 and these bills can not be changed for silver. They are still worth the dollar value though
Please check your bills again and post a new, separate question for each one. > The only bills dated 1957 are $1 bills. > The last $5 silver certificates are from 1953. > The last $2 silver certificates are from 1899.
The U.S. didn't print any bills dated 1956.
not rare at all they are counterfeit broski
The rather garish reverse-side design on 1934 $1 bills and their immediate predecessors led to them being nicknamed "funny back" bills. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1934 US 1 dollar silver certificate?" for more information.
Please check your bill again. The only silver certificates dated 1935 were $1 bills.
Bills from the 1899 series are the only US $2 silver certificates to carry a picture of George Washington. Please see the question "What is the value of an 1899 US 2 dollar silver certificate?" for more information.