The first $1 U.S. silver certificates were introduced in 1886. No certificates have been redeemable for silver since 1968.
The US never printed 100 dollar silver certificates with this date.
The US did not print any two dollar silver certificates after 1899.
Yes, but very long ago. The last printing of $20 silver certificates was the 1891 series.
The U.S. did not issue silver certificates in 1809.
The first US $2 silver certificates were printed in 1886
Higher-value silver certificates weren't printed very often. The only series dates for $100 silver certificates were 1878, 1880, and 1891.
The US only issued $1 silver certificates dated 1957. No other denominations have that date. The last $20 silver certificates were issued in the 1891 series.
Regardless of denomination, silver certificates were a form of currency backed dollar-for-dollar with silver bullion on deposit in the US Treasury. Please see the Related Question for a more detailed explanation.
No. When the US deregulated the price of silver back in the 1960s, the practice of redeeming silver certificates for metal was discontinued.
The last silver certificates were dated 1957 and there are no US bills dated 1965. By 1965 the U.S. had stopped making coins from silver and discontinued the policy of redeeming silver certificates for metal.
The only US bills dated 1935 were $1 silver certificates. $5 silver certificates were printed in the 1934 and 1953 series.
No, there were no $10,000 silver certificates Moreover, silver certificates were never issued by the Federal Reserve System. They were issued directly by the US Treasury.