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The $1 silver certificate from the Hawaii overprint series. 1899 United States five-dollar Silver Certificate (Chief Note) depicting Running Antelope of the Húŋkpapȟa. Silver certificates are a type of representative money issued between 1878 and 1964 in the United States as part of its circulation of paper currency. [1]
Red Book: A Guide Book Of United States Paper Money. Atlanta: Whitman. ISBN 0-7948-1786-6. Hudgeons, Marc; Tom Hudgeons (2005). Official 2006 Blackbook Price Guide to United States Paper Money. New York: Random House. Hughes, Roderick (2004). Official Know-It-All Guide. Hollywood: Fredrick Fell Publishers. ISBN 0-88391-109-4.
Granahan-Dillon: 1935H $1 Silver Certificate, 1957B $1 Silver Certificate, 1953C $5 Silver Certificate, 1953C $2 United States Note, 1953C $5 United States Note, 1963 $2 United States Note, 1963 $5 United States Note, 1950D $5, $10, $20, $50, and $100 Federal Reserve Notes, 1963 $1, $5, $10, and $20 Federal Reserve Notes.
The lower the serial number, the more valuable the currency is considered to be; a bill with the serial number 00000001 could be worth $15,000, according to SavingAdvice.com. 2. High Number
Serial numbers of all 8s and 9s can sell for thousands, because not all bills have been printed to full capacity with every run. A solid serial number that begins and ends with the same letter.
1899 $5 Indian Chief Large Silver Certificate. Value: $4,500. ... high serial number. Size discrepancy — the bill is either too small or too large compared to standard ones. ... you’ve got ...
The very first 1928 Silver Certificate issued (i.e., Serial number 1). The Series of 1928 was the first issue of small-size currency printed and released by the U.S. government . These notes, first released to the public on July 10, 1929, were the first standardized notes in terms of design and characteristics, featuring similar portraits and ...
Bills with red, brown and blue seals from 1862 through 1917 can be worth up to $1,000 or more on the U.S. Currency Auctions website, which bases the value on recent and past paper currency auctions.