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1. Series 1935 F, minted in Washington, DC (signed by Robert B. Anderson-Secretary of Treasury) one dollar bill, silver certificate

2. A two-dollar bill, Series 1976, minted in Washington, DC

3. A twenty-dollar bill, Series of 1934 A, Federal Reserve Note, with Hawaii stamped on it. Minted in San Francisco.

Or direct me a website that can tell me.

2007-08-15 09:50:33 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Games & Recreation Hobbies & Crafts

3 answers

The series 1935F sells for $3 in grade very fine and $10 in Crisp Uncirculated. It is not a rare note and you have to remember the date on a note is not when it was printed, but either first authorized like the series 1935, or in your case there was a change in signatures for the 1935F. Your note was printed up to the early 1950's or late 1940's.
The $2 note was minted for the Bicentennial and is not rare it sells for actually the same as the above note or a little less.
Now the 1934A Hawaii Emergency note is a different story. It was over printed with Hawaii for use there. The government was afraid The Japanese would take over Hawaii. Your note was over printed after the Dec. 7th bombing of Pearl Harbor. It sells for around $100 in grade fine and $275 in grade extra fine and $750 in crisp inoculated. The above values are a trends value that is an average of what a note would sell for on the retail market. That value is usually a little on the high side and dealers try to sell under it. They also pay much less like 40%-50% less. Hope this helps you out. One thing to remember, as time goes by your notes value only has one place to go and that is up. If you don't need the money hold onto them.

2007-08-15 14:06:11 · answer #1 · answered by Taiping 7 · 2 0

The best way to find out the value of your bills is to take it to a coin dealer. So much of value depends on the condition of your bills and the current market value. A dealer would be able to grade your coin and tell you the value.

These people here can help you too:
http://www.coincommunity.com/forum/default.asp

2007-08-15 18:58:40 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

as Blue T said, a coin dealer can help. You can find coin shows around and also at large flea markets.

2007-08-15 19:23:52 · answer #3 · answered by RB 7 · 1 0

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