Any coin dealer will buy them. Check your yellow pages.
Whether you can sell it depends on its date, condition, and denomination.
If you have a 1935 $1 bill you might get a couple of dollars for an early issue; i.e. one with no letter next to the date or a small letter A through D. Those with E through H are worth only slightly more than face value, as are nearly all 1957 $1 bills.
If you have something worthwhile check the phone book for a currency dealer and see if they're interested. But given the above information, don't expect to get rich, I'm afraid.
If you have another denomination OR your bill has overprinting for Hawaii or North Africa, please post a new and more specific question. Some of these bills do carry a significant premium.
There are many places, coin shops will buy them sometimes, Ebay or Craigslist can also help you find a buyer too.
You can sell silver coins to a coin collector, jewelry shop ect.
Some banks do sell American Silver Eagles, but they do not hold and sell silver coins that are turned in.
Silver certificates are a form of representative money used in place of actual physical silver, you can buy them on ebay.
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?"
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.
anywhere people,pawn shops,or collectors or collector markets or maybe may not accept
There are many places, coin shops will buy them sometimes, Ebay or Craigslist can also help you find a buyer too.
Huge numbers of 1957, 1957A, and 1957B $1 silver certificates were printed. None of them is rare; in fact even today they sell for $1.25 to $1.75 in average condition.
The first $1 U.S. silver certificates were introduced in 1886. No certificates have been redeemable for silver since 1968.
You can sell silver coins to a coin collector, jewelry shop ect.
Some banks do sell American Silver Eagles, but they do not hold and sell silver coins that are turned in.
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?"
"Valuable" 1957 silver certificates are an urban legend. They were saved in huge numbers and sell for about $1.50 in decent condition, maybe $3 uncirculated.
Silver certificates are a form of representative money used in place of actual physical silver, you can buy them on ebay.
The Silver Greyhound - 1919 is rated/received certificates of: UK:U
The Silver Greyhound - 1932 is rated/received certificates of: UK:U