The date of any dollar is at the center bottom.
A silver certificate is paper currency. It is not a coin. No silver dollars were minted in 1943, and no silver certificates were printed with that date either.
It's in roughly the same place where the date would be on a modern dollar bill
The US issued both $5 and $10 silver certificates with that date. Please make sure your bill has a blue seal and the words Silver Certificate across the top, then check one of these questions: "What is the value of a 1953 US 5 dollar silver certificate?" "What is the value of a 1953 US 10 dollar silver certificate?"
The U.S. did not print any $1 certificates with that date.
Please check that date again. There were no silver certificates before 1878. Perhaps your bill is from 1934.
A silver certificate is paper currency. It is not a coin. No silver dollars were minted in 1943, and no silver certificates were printed with that date either.
There's no such thing as a "blue silver dollar". If you're referring to a blue-seal silver certificate (a paper bill and not a coin) please post a new question with the bill's date and what letter if any is next to the date.
These bills are normally called silver certificates rather than "paper silver dollars". A date is needed to give a value - please check the date on the bill and post a new question "What is the value of a (date) US 1 dollar silver certificate?" for a specific answer. Up till the mid-1960s it was possible to exchange silver certificates for $1 in silver metal, but that practice ended when the price of silver was deregulated.
The US never printed 100 dollar silver certificates with this date.
It's in roughly the same place where the date would be on a modern dollar bill
A date is needed. Please check your bill again and look for questions like "What is the value of a (date) B US 5 dollar silver certificate?" for more information.
More information is needed because blue-seal silver certificates were issued for many decades and in different denominations. Please check your bill's date and denomination, then look for questions in the form ""What is the value of a [date] US [denomination] dollar silver certificate?"; e.g. "What is the value of a 1953 US 10 dollar silver certificate?"
The US issued both $5 and $10 silver certificates with that date. Please make sure your bill has a blue seal and the words Silver Certificate across the top, then check one of these questions: "What is the value of a 1953 US 5 dollar silver certificate?" "What is the value of a 1953 US 10 dollar silver certificate?"
The U.S. did not print any $1 certificates with that date.
Please post a new question and include the series date and condition of the bill.
Any red-seal US $2 bill dated 1928 or later is a United States Note and not a certificate. Certificates were exchangeable for silver or gold, and carried the words Silver Certificate or Gold Certificate across the top. Please see the question "What is the value of a (date) US 2 dollar bill?" for more information, where (date) is your bill's series date.
If you mean turn them in for silver? you can't, June 24 1968 was the last date to redeem silver certificates.