Results 1 - 48 of 165 SERIES 1957 ONE 1 DOLLAR BILL SILVER CERTIFICATE BLUE SEAL A,B,C,E. $3.99. Top Rated Plus. $4.20 shipping. Denomination: $1. Recall a time when folks could stop by the bank, hand the teller a bill, and get its face value back in silver coin, with this 1957A Silver Certificate! Small-size $1 20 May 2019 Although a silver certificate dollar bill no longer can be exchanged for The U.S. went from producing 1% of the world's silver to nearly 20% by Do you have an old 1957 one dollar silver certificate? Learn about this bill, which factors affect the value, and what the current prices are. $1 Bill Front Picture: Description: This is the last one dollar silver certificate issued by The United States. Seal Type: All 1957 $1 silver certificates have the same
As of 03/2010, a circulated 1957 A bill retails for $1.25 to $1.50 but a dealer is unlikely to pay more than face value (1 dollar). A nice uncirculated one might sell for around $3 and a dealer As of 2014, one dollar silver certificates from 1957 are worth between $1.25 and $4. Uncirculated dollar certificates bring in more money than circulated ones, but it is still a very small amount over face value. Due to the fact that these silver certificates are not very old and were not rare when they were created, they are not worth as much as some of the other silver certificates that are available on the market. BEST $1 FIND EVER bank strap hunting reveals $1 SILVER CERTIFICATE - Duration: 2:16. HiddenTreasureHunter 79,147 views
There are series 1957, 1957A, and 1957B. They are all equally common and none of them command premiums. 1957 $1 silver certificates can be bought in packs on 100. These typically sell for around $450. There are many different block varieties on all series of 1957 $1 silver certificates. One dollar silver certificates were printed from 1886 to 1957. The US government issued silver certificates as a response to criticism of the Fourth Coinage Act, which placed the US on the gold standard. There were many different one-dollar series issued. There are different sizes and some are more rare than others. Small-size $1 Silver Certificates were issued with series dates of 1928, 1934, 1935, and 1957 Once redeemable for silver coin or bullion on demand! These notes and the redemption option were discontinued by Act of Congress in 1963 Make Offer - 1957 $1 STAR NOTE SILVER CERTIFICATE ONE DOLLAR Blue Seal * STAR NOTE * 1957 or 1957 A series $1 Silver Certificates BLUE SEAL NOTE > HIGH GRADE $3.90
Make Offer - 1957 $1 STAR NOTE SILVER CERTIFICATE ONE DOLLAR Blue Seal * STAR NOTE * 1957 or 1957 A series $1 Silver Certificates BLUE SEAL NOTE > HIGH GRADE $3.90 Seal Type: All 1957 $1 silver certificates have the same seal type. Varieties: These can be noted as series of 1957, series of 1957A, or series of 1957B. Portrait: George Washington. Value: There aren’t any special 1957 $1 silver certificates. Most sell for around $1.50. Notes in perfect condition are worth closer to $3. The 1957 silver certificate dollar is one of the short silver certificates, which measure the same size as our current U.S. currency (6.4 inches long by 2.5 inches wide), and they bear the images of George Washington, Abraham Lincoln or Alexander Hamilton. 1957B $1 Silver certificates are very common with slight collectible value. Notes without star serial numbers in circulated condition value around $1.50-$3 each. Notes in uncirculated condition (like new) up to $5-$6. Notes with star serial numbers in circulated condition value around $5-$8 each.
1957A $1 Silver certificates are still very common to find in circulation. Notes without star serial numbers in circulated condition value around $1.50-$3 each. Notes in uncirculated condition (like new) up to $5-$6. Notes with star serial numbers in circulated condition value around $5-$8 each, while uncirculated stars to $11-$15. There are series 1957, 1957A, and 1957B. They are all equally common and none of them command premiums. 1957 $1 silver certificates can be bought in packs on 100. These typically sell for around $450. There are many different block varieties on all series of 1957 $1 silver certificates. One dollar silver certificates were printed from 1886 to 1957. The US government issued silver certificates as a response to criticism of the Fourth Coinage Act, which placed the US on the gold standard. There were many different one-dollar series issued. There are different sizes and some are more rare than others. Small-size $1 Silver Certificates were issued with series dates of 1928, 1934, 1935, and 1957 Once redeemable for silver coin or bullion on demand! These notes and the redemption option were discontinued by Act of Congress in 1963 Make Offer - 1957 $1 STAR NOTE SILVER CERTIFICATE ONE DOLLAR Blue Seal * STAR NOTE * 1957 or 1957 A series $1 Silver Certificates BLUE SEAL NOTE > HIGH GRADE $3.90 Seal Type: All 1957 $1 silver certificates have the same seal type. Varieties: These can be noted as series of 1957, series of 1957A, or series of 1957B. Portrait: George Washington. Value: There aren’t any special 1957 $1 silver certificates. Most sell for around $1.50. Notes in perfect condition are worth closer to $3.