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in mint or the best condition

2007-11-29 05:58:47 · 8 answers · asked by hsimeon 1 in Business & Finance Other - Business & Finance

8 answers

There are so many varieties of 1934 $10 that it is difficult to answer this without more information. Is this a Federal Reserve note? A Silver Certificate? If so, blue or yellow seal? A Hawaii note? Series 1934 or 1934A, B, C, or D?

Here is a link to a listing of all Series 1934 $10 bills presently for sale on eBay, including all varieties, so you can see what they are selling for:

http://search.ebay.com/search/search.dll?sofocus=bs&sbrftog=1&combine=y&fcl=3&from=R10&ftid=2&fcd=1&satitle=%2410+1934*&sacat=40028%26catref%3DC6&sabfmts=1&ftrt=1&ftrv=1&saprclo=&saprchi=&fsop=1%26fsoo%3D1&coaction=compare&copagenum=1&coentrypage=search

As far as future value: High end material will do well. Of all of these, Hawaii notes and yellow seal silver certificates will be best. The rest is fairly common and won't do as well.

2007-11-29 06:22:08 · answer #1 · answered by F. Frederick Skitty 7 · 1 0

$10

2007-11-29 06:01:02 · answer #2 · answered by kooooo 2 · 0 0

10$

2007-11-29 06:01:16 · answer #3 · answered by psychopiet 6 · 0 0

if it is in mint condition about 25 bucks if it is in quite used condition about $13.

I have a $50 from 1934 and it is in used condition and it's hard to fetch much more than it's face value froma ny collector, I mean i could get like $70.

2007-11-29 06:05:03 · answer #4 · answered by the d 6 · 0 0

About $10 bucks

2007-11-29 06:01:07 · answer #5 · answered by bigbuttcheek 3 · 0 0

2 cents

2007-11-29 06:01:23 · answer #6 · answered by MHA 2 · 0 0

$10, unless you invest it.

2007-11-29 06:02:00 · answer #7 · answered by Matthew J 3 · 0 0

go in a museum and ask someone there ok ? and probaly its worth more:P

2007-11-29 06:01:51 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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