Then it's a normal, ordinary 1899 silver dollar. Remember, up till 1964 all dimes, quarters, halves, and dollars were made of 90% silver because the metal's price was controlled. They were used for daily commerce, and weren't sold as bullion pieces so there was no need to mark them as being made of silver - everyone knew it.
No US One Dollar coins dated 1899 with a legend of "Thirteen Colonies" exist. It's not a US Mint coin.
Please see the attached link
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
From $15 to $360, depending on the signatures and especially on the condition.
uncirculated = $17proof = $50
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.
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.
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.
The morgan silver dollar has a picture of lady libert's head on one side, ribbed all around outer edges, and an american eagle on a fig branch on the other side. The front says "e. Pluribus.unum" and the date, the back says "united states of america, one dollar" and "in God we trust" and will have a "mint mark" above the "do" in dollar
One dollar.
One dollar.
One dollar.