From 1899 to 1953, all $5 silver certificates were printed with blue seals. Beginning in the 1920s, all other denominations of silver certificates were also standardized with that color.
Other seal colors used are (or were):
Please post a new question with the bill's date and seal color.
The seal color is actually yellow but has darkened with age. Yellow-seal bills were printed for use by troops in North Africa during WWII. There's more information at the question "What is the value of a 1934 A US 10 dollar silver certificate with a yellow seal?"
Your bill was specially-printed during WWII for use in North Africa. The seal color was originally yellow but may have darkened with age; please see the question "What is the value of a 1934 A US 5 dollar silver certificate with a yellow seal?" for much more information.
Not enough details. Please post a new question with the bill's date, seal color, and whether there is a small letter next to the date.
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?"
Please don't assume that every old bill is a silver certificate. As the banner across its top and green seal color indicate, your bill is a Federal Reserve Note, the same kind issued today but with a different design. There's more information the at question "What is the value of a 1963 US 20 dollar bill?".
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question with its date and seal color. The last US $100.00 silver certificates were printed in 1891 and are extremely rare.
It was actually printed in Washington for use in Hawaii during WWII. The bills were a different color and had the name HAWAII in large letters so they'd be easy to spot and could be declared worthless if captured by the Japanese. There's more information at the question "What is the value of a 1935 US 1 dollar silver certificate with HAWAII on it?"
The U.S. did not print any $5 silver certificates with that date. Please check again and post a new question with the bill's seal color and what letter, if any, appears next to the date.
1. Not 1954. The U.S. didn't print any bills of any type with that date. 2. Not a silver certificate. $2 silver certificates were last made in 1899. Please check again and post a new question. Include the bill's seal color and whether there's a small letter next to / under the date.
Please don't assume that every old bill has to be a silver certificate. 1928 $10 bills were issued as gold certificates with gold seals and as Federal Reserve Notes, with the familiar green seal and the words "Federal Reserve Note" across the top.Please check the bill's seal color and wording across your bill's top front; then see one of the following questions:"What is the value of a 1928 US 10 dollar Federal Reserve Note?""What is the value of a 1928 US 10 dollar gold certificate?"
The Susan B Anthony dollar is the same silvery color as the US quarter, dime and half-dollar. However, the coin contains no silver.