If a bill is a silver certificate it will have those words in the banner across the top of the bill's front. The color isn't what matters, although most silver certificates from 1923 to 1957 can be identified by the use of blue ink for the seal and serial numbers. Some private companies take ordinary bills, layer them with a tiny amount of silver or gold, and sell them at inflated prices as "collectibles". Sometimes people end up spending them after they find out they're bad investments; it causes a lot of confusion when they show up in change.
The best way to find out the value of a Silver Certificate is to take it to a professional. This would be either a dealer or appraiser that specializes in coins and money.
A person can find a picture of Barack Obama's birth certificate in several places. Some of these places include Huffington Post, USA Today, and American Thinker.
You can take it to a coin dealer and have it appraised.
It doesn't look like anything because the last silver certificates were $1 bills dated 1957. You can find many pictures of other dates by looking online at sites such as the one linked below.
You can find it in the Mountain Portion of the Safari Zone.
I cannot find any references to any denomination of silver certificate issued with that date. Could you provide better information, including a description of your bill?
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Please re-check your bill. You'll find that it's a Federal Reserve Note. The last $2 silver certificates were dated 1899, and the last silver certificates of any denomination were dated 1957. Unless it's uncirculated, a 2003 $2 FRN is worth only face value.
Retail is $2 to 3 depending on condition.
If you had a name change, you will need a picture identification and your marraige certificate in addition to the application. You can find this application online or at the social security office.
It's in roughly the same place where the date would be on a modern dollar bill