Assuming your bill is genuine, many are valued in price close to $35 each. The amount will vary depending upon the condition that the bill is in.
However many "Confederate" banknotes are actually replicas that have been sold in gift shops or even printed as advertising tie-ins. It's important to have your bill examined in person by an expert dealer or appraiser who works with Confederate currency.
That serial number indicates it's a replica bill and not the genuine article. It has curiosity value only.
Confederate money from the Civil War era has no monetary value today. It is considered a historical artifact and is not accepted as legal tender.
Confederate money lost value during the Civil War due to inflation caused by the Confederate government printing more money than it could back with gold or silver. This led to a significant decrease in the purchasing power of Confederate currency.
one us dollar is about 32 TN
a half dollar
There was no Confederate money in 1845.
I also have one of thes ten dollar notes no. g 646 1834. Have you found any additional information on its value? jean
The value is about 39$ if the bill is in good condition
I have a confederate 100 dollar bill dated feb 17th 1864. I know it is not a copy.it has 10856 on the front and richmond. can you tell me the value?
About $33,000
The Confederacy was not in existence in 1962.
1834 bust-type halves are about average in scarcity for that design.As of 6/2012Very worn: $40Moderately worn: $65Nearly new: $275DanUser:WorkingMan
The short-lived Confederate States of America only issued two coins, the one cent and the half dollar. A genuine Confederate half dollar is so rare that it does not have a listed value. A number of restrikes were made decades later which run from a few thousand to tens of thousands of dollars in value depending on their wear.
It would be priceless because an 1834 CSA bill would be from an alternate universe. In our timeline the Confederacy existed only from 1861 to 1865. Please take another look and post a new question with the bill's actual date. However most "Confederate" bills on the market are replicas.
Sounds like a bad fake to me. The Confederacy only existed from 1861 to 1865.
The U.S. did not make any silver dollars from 1804 to 1835 inclusive. There has been a flood of counterfeit dollar coins on the market over the last couple of decades, some good, but many with significant goofs in date and/or design. If you have an "1834 dollar" it is one of the latter, I'm afraid.
, can you send me a pic of this coin? shughes_08@yahoo.com Thanks.