Silver certificates are a form of representative money used in place of actual physical silver, you can buy them on ebay.
The US never printed 100 dollar silver certificates with this date.
If you are talking about a US coin, you have to go to the US mint website to buy silver coins. Banks don't sell silver coins. They don't distribute them either.
That's no longer possible. When the US deregulated the price of silver back in the 1960s, the practice of redeeming silver certificates for metal was discontinued.
Silver certificates were "regular money" at one time, circulating alongside other bill types like Federal Reserve Notes and United States Notes, as well as gold certificates before 1933. The only difference was that silver certificates could be exchanged at banks for silver metal.There's more information at "What is a US silver certificate?"
Please check your bill's date and denomination, and post a new, separate question with both pieces of information. The US didn't print any silver certificates dated 1922, only gold certificates
The US did not make silver certificates in 1740.
The first $1 U.S. silver certificates were introduced in 1886. No certificates have been redeemable for silver since 1968.
You can as a federal reserve note but not in silver coin. The US government in the late 1960s halted redemption of silver coin for silver certificates.
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 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.
Higher-value silver certificates weren't printed very often. The only series dates for $100 silver certificates were 1878, 1880, and 1891.
The US never printed 100 dollar silver certificates with this date.
Yes, but very long ago. The last printing of $20 silver certificates was the 1891 series.
No. Sell them for the collector value then buy silver!MoreThe government stopped redeeming silver certificates for silver metal in 1968, after the price of silver was deregulated. The collector value of a silver certificate depends on several factors, among others:> Its denomination> How worn it is> Its date> The letter, if any, next to the date> Its seal color (sometimes - usually it's blue but some bills have other colors)WikiAnswers already has specific values for most common silver certificates. Look for questions in the form "What is the value of a (date) US (amount) dollar silver certificate?"; for example "What is the value of a 1953 US 5 dollar silver certificate?"
The first silver certificates were issued in 1878, and included all denominations from $10 to $1,000. Lower-denomination silver certificates were issued starting in 1886.
Please check again and post a new question. The last $10 silver certificates were dated 1953. The only US bills that were dated 1957 were $1 silver certificates
Please check again and post a new question. The last $5 silver certificates were dated 1953. The only US bills that were dated 1957 were $1 silver certificates