Please check your coin again. No US silver dollars were minted from 1905 to 1920 inclusive.
If the date is definitely 1914 then you have one of the numerous counterfeit or fantasy pieces that have entered the market over the last 20 years or so.
Please don't assume that every old bill is a silver certificate. 1914 $20 bills were issued as Federal Reserve Notes, not silver certificates. There's more information at the question "What is the value of a 1914 US 20 dollar bill?".
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. There were no 1914 $10 silver certificates, only Federal Reserve Notes.
what is the current value of an 1878 silver dollar
Sorry no US silver dollar coins dated 1826
Please don't assume that every old bill is a silver certificate. The banner across its top identifies your bill as a Federal Reserve Note only. There's more information at the question "What is the value of a 1914 US 50 dollar bill?" Federal Reserve Notes were very different from silver certificates and were never combined. Silver certificates were issued directly by the Treasury and were backed dollar-for-dollar with silver on deposit. Federal Reserve Notes are issued by the Federal Reserve Bank and are not backed with precious metal.
Please don't assume that every old bill is a silver certificate. 1914 $20 bills were issued as Federal Reserve Notes, not silver certificates. There's more information at the question "What is the value of a 1914 US 20 dollar bill?".
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. There were no 1914 $10 silver certificates, only Federal Reserve Notes.
A real silver dollar has a $25.00 value just for the silver.
what is the current value of an 1878 silver dollar
Sorry no US silver dollar coins dated 1826
The US never printed 100 dollar silver certificates with this date.
No US silver dollars were made after 1935, look at the back of the coin for 'Half Dollar'.
Please don't assume that every old bill is a silver certificate. The banner across its top identifies your bill as a Federal Reserve Note only. There's more information at the question "What is the value of a 1914 US 50 dollar bill?" Federal Reserve Notes were very different from silver certificates and were never combined. Silver certificates were issued directly by the Treasury and were backed dollar-for-dollar with silver on deposit. Federal Reserve Notes are issued by the Federal Reserve Bank and are not backed with precious metal.
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.
The US didn't print any $5 silver certificates with that date.If your bill has a blue seal normally associated with silver certificates it's still a Federal Reserve Note. It's sometimes difficult to identify early Federal Reserve Notes by their ink color because the use of green wasn't standardized until later.Please see the question What is the value of a 1914 US 5 dollar bill? for details.
current silver troy ounce value
1914 would have made it a Liberty head (or Barber) style half dollar. Pictures can be found online.