1957 star silver certificate, have two but way different serials 8847 is one 6269 is the other the white one, 1988 A. ive had it ever since i was little, the back is regular color. i thought they stopped silver certificates and then made regular bills. i have these. a 1950 A , regular bill, and a 1953 silver certificate. any one know when they started the regular bills and stopped silver certificates
They printed SC up till to the 1957 series. They also printed red seal USN's up to series 1963. The started printing Small Size Federal Reserve Notes in 1928 Look around and you will see some other notes printed for the war with different color seals. You might want to pick up a copy of Small Size US Paper Money by Schwartz-Lindquist. Nice notes - Good Luck ~ Darryl
Don't forget the red seal 100's. The 1966A notes are signed by David Kennedy, who signed all 1969 FRN's so these likely were been printed later. They are the last of the red seals and I've heard that the government recently destroyed the remaining hoard of unissued 1966A 100 USN's. They printed SC up till to the 1957 series. They also printed red seal USN's up to series 1963. The started printing Small Size Federal Reserve Notes in 1928 Look around and you will see some other notes printed for the war with different color seals. You might want to pick up a copy of Small Size US Paper Money by Schwartz-Lindquist.
here you go, the back of the white one. i just collect stuff i get in change, or that people have gotten in change and gave to me, by no means is it the best, probly worthless as a collector goes. but then again i havent valued any of them so i dont know what they are really worth if it came down to it. looked for that paper money book, no luck, ill have to see if i can find it on amazon or something.. thanks all
The whole small printing of 1966A $100's took place in January 1971. The serials printed were A00768001A to A01280000A, but most of that range does not seem to have been issued--I watched Ebay for a couple of years and the highest serial I ever saw was in the 0088xxxx range. This is why the 1966A is so much rarer than the 1966: The printage of 1966A notes was two-thirds of the 1966 printage, but the number of 1966A notes actually issued seems to have been more like one-seventh of the 1966. All red-seal $100's remaining in the Treasury's and Fed's possession were shredded in either 1994 or 1996, depending on whom you ask. There was a push by collectors asking the government to auction them off instead, like the GSA silver dollars in the '70s, but it turned out not to be possible: When Congress changed the law so that the red-seal notes no longer *had* to be kept in circulation, the new wording they adopted actually *prohibited* any more of them from being released, and Congress wasn't going to revise the law again just to make a few collectors happy.