Bills from the 1899 series are the only US $2 silver certificates to carry a picture of George Washington. Please see the question "What is the value of an 1899 US 2 dollar silver certificate?" for more information.
George Washington. From 1928 to 1934, the one dollar bill was actually known as a Silver Certificate.
A martha washington silver certificate dollar bill is currently worth approx (In decent shape) 5-750.00
The series 1917 "George Washington" United States Note is not a Silver Certificate. There were no "Silver Certificate" notes printed with the series 1917. The series of "Silver Certificate" notes used during that time had the date of 1899 or 1923. The 1899 Silver Certificate had a "Black Eagle", and the 1923 Silver Certificates had "George Washington" on the front, respectively. The 1917 "George Washington" United States Note have five different set of signatures. These signatures are signed by the Register of the United States and the Treasurer of the United States. They are Teehee & Burke, Elliott & Burke, Burke & Elliott, Elliott & White, and Speelman & White. The values for these notes vary depending on who signed the notes, the condition of the note, and the grade of the note.
Current value is about $7
The silver certificate and the gold certificate were replaced by the Federal Reserve Dollar.
What is the question? Is there such a thing or do you have one? I have one.
George Washington. From 1928 to 1934, the one dollar bill was actually known as a Silver Certificate.
A martha washington silver certificate dollar bill is currently worth approx (In decent shape) 5-750.00
They are worth one dollar each.
The series 1917 "George Washington" United States Note is not a Silver Certificate. There were no "Silver Certificate" notes printed with the series 1917. The series of "Silver Certificate" notes used during that time had the date of 1899 or 1923. The 1899 Silver Certificate had a "Black Eagle", and the 1923 Silver Certificates had "George Washington" on the front, respectively. The 1917 "George Washington" United States Note have five different set of signatures. These signatures are signed by the Register of the United States and the Treasurer of the United States. They are Teehee & Burke, Elliott & Burke, Burke & Elliott, Elliott & White, and Speelman & White. The values for these notes vary depending on who signed the notes, the condition of the note, and the grade of the note.
$1 silver certificates printed during the 20th century carried the familiar picture of George Washington. Earlier $1 silver certificates had pictures of Ulysses S. Grant and Abraham Lincoln, Martha Washington, or allegorical figures.
Current value is about $7
A Washington silver dollar, believe it or not.
The familiar portrait of George Washington appeared on all US $1 silver certificates from the 1923 to 1957 series. Prior to that, other individuals and presidents including Lincoln and Grant appeared on $1 silver certificates.
90%
In circulated condition it has no extra value. It's brass, not silver, and was minted in 2007 as part of the Presidential Dollar series. 1789-1797 are the years Washington served as president.
The silver certificate and the gold certificate were replaced by the Federal Reserve Dollar.