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The US did not print any two dollar silver certificates after 1899.
The term is "silver certificate", and more information is needed.Please post a new question with the bill's date and a description of the images on it. In any case, make sure that what you have really is a $2 silver certificate, because the last such bills issued by the government were dated 1899. All federally-issued $2 bills printed after that were US Notes or Federal Reserve Notes.
They aren't. All silver dollars are worth at least their value in silver. If you mean why their face value is so small, it is because of two factors. The first main factor is inflation, due to the fact that the US dollar is no longer backed up by anything, the government has printed billions upon billions of dollars out of thin air, this makes every dollar that everyone has worth less with every dollar they print. Because silver dollars have silver in them, they keep their value despite the rampant fraud that the government is doing. The second main reason why silver keeps going up is because silver is used in many high-tech applications (silver is the best electrical conductor) which is increasing demand.
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ocean of fun and silver dollar
The US did not print any two dollar silver certificates after 1899.
I wood like to no what there worth, I have two 1957
There are two extremely valuable silver certificates. The 1928E 1 dollar bill and the 1933 10 dollar bill.
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.
The US printed two types of bills with that date. Silver Certificates have blue seals and the words SILVER CERTIFICATE on them; US Notes have red seals and the words UNITED STATES NOTE.Depending on which you have, please see one of the following questions for more information:What is the value of a 1923 US 1 dollar silver certificate?What is the value of a 1923 1 dollar US Note?
The bill must be a $1 silver certificate. All $2 bills issued after 1918 are either US Notes or Federal Reserve Notes, and none were dated 1935.
The U.S. hasn't printed silver certificates since the 1960s, and there was never a $2 silver certificate.
I dont know what you have there but it did not come from the U.S. B.E.P.
Banks don't buy or sell collectible currency. Regardless of a bill's age or rarity, a bank is only allowed to give you face value so you would only get $1 for a 1935 silver certificate. That said, most average-condition 1935 $1 bills aren't worth much more than a dollar or two anyway. There's more information at the question "What is the value of a 1935 US 1 dollar silver certificate?"
If it's a silver certificate with a red seal, current auction prices are $300.-$1100. depending on the bill's condition.
Please check again. It's a United States Note, not a silver certificate. Silver certificates from the 1930s to the 1950s all had blue seals. See the Related Question for more information.
It not on the bill