There is no such thing as a "Morgan $2 bill". George T. Morgan designed coins, not bills. Most red seal $2 bills are worth only a few dollars above face value, although they can retail for higher prices if in uncirculated condtion. Given that situation, sequential serial numbers add little or nothing to their value.
The U.S. did not print any $2 bills with that date.
There were no 1901 dollar bills
Morgan dollars are silver, not gold.
The value of 1981 one-dollar bills in sequential order is primarily determined by their condition and demand among collectors. Generally, these bills are worth their face value of one dollar unless they have unique features, such as misprints or being part of a rare serial number sequence. In uncirculated condition, they might fetch a small premium, but typically they are valued at around $1 to $5 each. For a complete series in sequential order, the total would be simply the face value multiplied by the number of bills.
A circulated 1878 Morgan silver dollar can be worth 32 to 156 dollars.
20 dollars each
In general, they have no added value.
Face value only.
The U.S. did not print any $2 bills with that date.
Unless they're from the 1950's or older, they are not going to have any significant added value.
Assuming they are nice crisp uncirculated notes, about $1,000 for the set.
You could exchange them for five loonies at a Canadian bank.
First, it is not a Morgan dollar, it is a Peace dollar, second, it is worth around melt value to local dealers. That value is $23.50 .
There were no 1901 dollar bills
Count how many bills you have. That's how much they're worth. The only way there might be an additional collector value is if it's an older set and the notes are in decent condition.
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