The lettering should read Pat. instead of fat. Pat. Apd. is abreviated meaning Patient Applied For. Hope this helps you.
I assume you mean a silver certificate, not a dollar coin. Values range from $6 if worn, up to about $35 in near-new condition.
look at the stupid seal! if the card is a 1st edition, the seal has to be gold. this is also true for limited edition cards. Unlimited vesions have silver seals. 1st edition/limited edition = gold seal Unlimited = silver seal. unlimiteds can't have a gold seal
Lvl 34
brown seal and silver
It's a number indicating which plate was used to print the bill.
Please post a new question with the bill's date and seal color. A red seal indicates it's a United States Note and a green seal is for a Federal Reserve Note. The last $2 silver certificates were printed in 1891.
The sinews of a seal are the bony rings near the seal's snout.
if you have the seal case just talk to you
Blue seals indicate that the note is a Silver Certificate. Before silver was withdrawn from circulation, silver certificates were backed 1-for-1 with the same worth of silver metal in the Treasury. They could be exchanged at banks for silver, although few people actually did so by the mid-20th century. Red seals indicate a special series of currency called United States Notes. Neither one of these series is still issued. All modern currency is issued as Federal Reserve Notes. Gold certificates with gold seals were issued until 1928, and they were redeemable for their price in gold.
Vitus is on the Virginia state seal, if that is what you mean.
how we broke vrigina seal
The blue seal is on the right where the green is usually. There is no seal on the left. The words Washington DC are over the blue seal instead of the word ONE. The # is over the seal and also on the left side.