I don't know of any place that will blanketly give someone $8.00 for this type of bill. The value is dependant on the series and the signatures on the bill. If it's a 1953-B with the signatures being Smith-Dillon AND the seriel number has a star after it, it could be worth over $2,000.
This depends on if it is a Morgan or Trade dollar.
If you've got a bronze trade dollar coin, it is a fake. Real trade dollars were made out of silver, not bronze.
No Trade Dollars were struck in 1876. First year of issue was 1878
The Actual Silver Weight (ASW) is .77344oz of pure silver. All silver dollars (except Trade Dollars) from 1878 to 1935 contain the same amount of silver.
The Actual Silver Weight (ASW) is .77344oz of pure silver. All silver dollars (except Trade Dollars) from 1878 to 1935 contain the same amount of silver.
No 1783 Trade Dollars exist, first year of issue was 1873
If you mean turn them in for silver? you can't, June 24 1968 was the last date to redeem silver certificates.
No, The law was changed in 1968 and these bills can not be changed for silver. They are still worth the dollar value though
1957 $1 bills are silver certificates. In the old days, you could trade that dollar for $1 worth of silver, or silver dollars. Right now, you can sell them or keep it.
Your 1884 Trade Dollar is a copy or fake with little or no value. There are only 10 known 1884 Trade Dollars and there all Proof coins
The Actual Silver Weight (except for Trade Dollars) of one dollar U.S. coins from 1840 to 1935 is .77344oz of pure silver.
There were no dollar coins minted in the U.S. in 1986.