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The value is just for the gold by weight. It has no collectible value.
The letter K refers to the Dallas branch of the Federal Reserve. Those letters (A through L) each correspond with a specific bank and district.
The 1934 series only extends to the letter D. You may be confusing the Federal Reserve Bank letter (K = Dallas) with the series letter; that's next to the date, not in the center of the seal. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1934 US 100 dollar bill?" for more information.
Only one series of 1976 $2 bills was printed, so none of them would have a series letter. A series letter is always next to (below or to the right) of the date. If the "K" is in the Federal Reserve Seal, it's the indicator letter for the Federal Reserve Bank that distributed the bill. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1976 US 2 dollar bill?" for more information.
Please check your bill again. There were no series letters on 1934 silver certificates, and no silver certificate series letters ever went as high as K. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1934 US 1 dollar silver certificate?" for more information.
Face value unless it's crisp and uncirculated.The serial number hardly ever matters to a bill's value. The only ones that are of interest are ones that are very low; e.g. 00000002, or follow a pattern such as 12345678 or 12344321.
The value is just for the gold by weight. It has no collectible value.
Additional: one corner and you have month JFK was killed, add two corners and you have the day and year printed was year he was killed. Now add all corners, you have JFK's age at time of death. This had to be worth something The 11's indicate the 11th Federal Reserve District, and so does the K, so every one-dollar bill printed (not minted, that's for coins) for the Dallas district has the 4 11s in the corners and a serial number preceeded by a K. The series 1963 was produced for 6 years.
It's nothing but a coincidental curiosity with little or no collector value.
The US has never printed five dollar bills with this date. Check the date again and post a new question.
The letter K refers to the Dallas branch of the Federal Reserve. Those letters (A through L) each correspond with a specific bank and district.
The 1934 series only extends to the letter D. You may be confusing the Federal Reserve Bank letter (K = Dallas) with the series letter; that's next to the date, not in the center of the seal. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1934 US 100 dollar bill?" for more information.
Only one series of 1976 $2 bills was printed, so none of them would have a series letter. A series letter is always next to (below or to the right) of the date. If the "K" is in the Federal Reserve Seal, it's the indicator letter for the Federal Reserve Bank that distributed the bill. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1976 US 2 dollar bill?" for more information.
A series of 1963 One Dollar bill with a Federal Reserve Seal that has a "K" in it, means it was distributed by the Federal Reserve band of Dallas TX. It has no connection at all to JFK.MoreThe Dallas district started using the "K" seal in 1914, three years before JFK was even born, and continues to use that code letter to the present day. The coincidence is odd, but it's still nothing but a coincidence.
Please check your bill again. There were no series letters on 1934 silver certificates, and no silver certificate series letters ever went as high as K. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1934 US 1 dollar silver certificate?" for more information.
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. 1928 red-seal $1 bills don't have series letters, and no $1 bills from any year have a "K" series letter.
All U.S. dollar bills have a letter A through L to indicate a Federal Reserve Bank branch where the bill was first issued. K refers to the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.