an uncirculated note has no folds.Folds are hard to see sometimes you have to hold the note an angle in front of a good light source to see it there are any.If it is uncirculated the value would be around the $6-$7 range.If any folds no matter how lite the value drops to the $2-$3 range at best.
Hope this helps.
There were no series letters on 1899 $2 silver certificates. Please see the question "What is the value of an 1899 US 2 dollar silver certificate" for values and other information.
There is no "series D silver dollar" (a coin) so I assume you're referring to a silver certificate (a bill). However there were different series that went up to "D"; you'll need to check the bill's date and post a new, separate question with that information.
Money gets its value from the confidence that the public has in its acceptability. An example of such monetary system, is the United States monetary system. If you ever noticed the words in any dollar bill which says "In God We Trust" was first used in 1957. Before that date, dollar bills were showing "Silver Certificate". That means the dollar's value was equal to silver. But now the dollar is equal to how much you trust in the dollar and the monetary system. If the public lose the confidence, the dollar bill would worth nothing but a piece of paper. Basically, "In God We Trust" is a way to ask public in a nice way to never lose faith of the dollar, not God.
The US did not print any two dollar silver certificates after 1899.
Any red-seal US $2 bill dated 1928 or later is a United States Note and not a certificate. Certificates were exchangeable for silver or gold, and carried the words Silver Certificate or Gold Certificate across the top. Please see the question "What is the value of a (date) US 2 dollar bill?" for more information, where (date) is your bill's series date.
About $1.25
$3.00
About $2.00
Check
There were no $1 silver certificates with series 1937 for the year.
Please check your bill again. There were no series letters on 1934 silver certificates, and no silver certificate series letters ever went as high as K. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1934 US 1 dollar silver certificate?" for more information.
There is no "series D silver dollar" (a coin) so I assume you're referring to a silver certificate. See the Related Question for more information.
About six dollars
The U.S. did not issue silver certificates in 1809.
A $1 silver certificate series 1934 is currently worth about $20 in circulated condition, and about $40 in a nice, crisp uncirculated condition.DanUser:WorkingMan
it should say it on the right
About $3.