Silver
certificates were a standard currency in our country for nearly 100
years. From their inception in 1878 till their final printing in 1963
(series of 1957), silver certificates were designed to be backed by
the value of actual silver. With silver on the rise in the 1960's the
actual value of a silver dollar was becoming more than the face value
of a one dollar note forcing the U.S. to quit printing them.
Redemption for the silver certificates continued until June 24, 1968.
After that time the certificate maintained its value as a Federal
Reserve note, but was no longer redeemable for a silver dollar.
With
silver at the $30 dollar mark this week a stark contrast
between the value of silver and the value of the dollar can be seen.
The true value of a silver certificate is its face value, but most
are worth a slight premium to collectors. A vast majority of silver
certificates still known to exist trade from $1.25 to $2.00 each. Of
course there are varieties and issues that are worth much more, but
most fall into this category.
At the same time a silver dollar has shot up to at least
$23 based on its silver content, which is about 77% of an ounce. Of
course some have even more value to a collector based on rarity or
conditional factors. Most silver dollars trade for between $23-$30
for the common dates and grades. There are always a host of reasons
that silver dollars can be worth much more than $30, but most do not
make the higher category due to availability and demand.
Looking
at the value difference between the silver certificate and the silver
coin can be eye opening. If a person had $1000 in 1968 and kept them
in silver certificates the value today would most likely be around
$1500. But, if that same person had redeemed their certificates for
coins the value in today's dollars would be around $23,000.
In
1968 many collectors kept their silver certificates in hopes of the
collector value going up, but after 40 years it has been shown that
the wiser choice was to keep the actual silver over the certificates
themselves. If you have older silver certificates you can always have
them checked to see if they are better varieties or issues, but the
value of each will be dependent on that fact itself. Trading your old
paper money in for metals will not net you as much now as it would
have a generation ago, but it may just be a wise move for the
generation you pass it down to.
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