A denomination is needed; please post a new and separate question.
$1 bills from 1969 and later are only worth $1 unless they are in uncirculated condition.
C was the highest series letter for 1969 $10 bills. If you're looking at a large E inside a circular seal it's the Federal Reserve District letter rather than the series letter. The latter, if any, is next to the date. Please see the Related Question for details.
US $50 dollar bills have been printed in dozens of series from 1862 to the present. Because series dates stay the same until a new series starts, bills are almost always printed every single year although they carry the date when the series began. The main series dates and bill types are: 1862 United States Note 1863 United States Note 1863-64 Compound Interest Treasury Note 1869 United States Note 1870-75 National Gold Bank Note 1874 United States Note 1875 United States Note 1878 United States Note 1878 Silver Certificate 1880 Silver Certificate 1880 Silver Certificate 1880 United States Note 1880 United States Note 1882 Gold Certificate 1882 Gold Certificate 1891 Treasury Note 1891 Silver Certificate 1891 Silver Certificate 1913 Gold Certificate 1914 Federal Reserve Note 1914 Federal Reserve Note 1918 National Currency/FRBN 1922 Gold Certificate 1928 Gold Certificate 1928 Federal Reserve Note 1928A Federal Reserve Note 1929 National Currency 1929 National Currency 1934-1934D Federal Reserve Note 1950-1950E Federal Reserve Note 1963-1963A Federal Reserve Note 1969-1969C Federal Reserve Note 1974 Federal Reserve Note 1977 Federal Reserve Note 1981-1981A Federal Reserve Note 1985 Federal Reserve Note 1988 Federal Reserve Note 1990 Federal Reserve Note 1993 Federal Reserve Note 1994 Federal Reserve Note 1996 Federal Reserve Note 2001 Federal Reserve Note 2004 Federal Reserve Note 2006 Federal Reserve Note 2009 Federal Reserve Note 2013 Federal Reserve Note
In perfect uncirculated quality, it is worth between $15-$50, depending on the signatures. In any other quality, despite it's age, it is worth face value ($5) only. The same holds true for nearly all Federal Reserve Notes printed from the late 1960s up to the present.
A denomination is needed; please post a new and separate question.
You didn't specify the bill's denomination, but most bills printed in the 1960s and later are only worth face value unless they're in perfect condition.
$1 bills from 1969 and later are only worth $1 unless they are in uncirculated condition.
C was the highest series letter for 1969 $10 bills. If you're looking at a large E inside a circular seal it's the Federal Reserve District letter rather than the series letter. The latter, if any, is next to the date. Please see the Related Question for details.
US $50 dollar bills have been printed in dozens of series from 1862 to the present. Because series dates stay the same until a new series starts, bills are almost always printed every single year although they carry the date when the series began. The main series dates and bill types are: 1862 United States Note 1863 United States Note 1863-64 Compound Interest Treasury Note 1869 United States Note 1870-75 National Gold Bank Note 1874 United States Note 1875 United States Note 1878 United States Note 1878 Silver Certificate 1880 Silver Certificate 1880 Silver Certificate 1880 United States Note 1880 United States Note 1882 Gold Certificate 1882 Gold Certificate 1891 Treasury Note 1891 Silver Certificate 1891 Silver Certificate 1913 Gold Certificate 1914 Federal Reserve Note 1914 Federal Reserve Note 1918 National Currency/FRBN 1922 Gold Certificate 1928 Gold Certificate 1928 Federal Reserve Note 1928A Federal Reserve Note 1929 National Currency 1929 National Currency 1934-1934D Federal Reserve Note 1950-1950E Federal Reserve Note 1963-1963A Federal Reserve Note 1969-1969C Federal Reserve Note 1974 Federal Reserve Note 1977 Federal Reserve Note 1981-1981A Federal Reserve Note 1985 Federal Reserve Note 1988 Federal Reserve Note 1990 Federal Reserve Note 1993 Federal Reserve Note 1994 Federal Reserve Note 1996 Federal Reserve Note 2001 Federal Reserve Note 2004 Federal Reserve Note 2006 Federal Reserve Note 2009 Federal Reserve Note 2013 Federal Reserve Note
Bills printed in 1969 or later are only worth face value unless they are uncirculated. Note that a bill's serial number isn't an identifying feature. What matters is the date, any series letter next to the date, and sometimes the Federal Reserve district letter.
In perfect uncirculated quality, it is worth between $15-$50, depending on the signatures. In any other quality, despite it's age, it is worth face value ($5) only. The same holds true for nearly all Federal Reserve Notes printed from the late 1960s up to the present.
Not enough information. If it is a U.S. $1000 bill its value depends heavily on what date is on it and whether it was issued as a Federal Reserve note (green seal) or some other kind of bill. U.S. $1000 bills were last printed in 1945 and those carried the series date 1934. The government stopped distributing them through banks in 1969.
The last batch was printed in 1945. The Federal Reserve discontinued circulating them July 14, 1969.
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. The last red-seal $100 bills were dated 1966. All 1969 $100 bills were issued as green-seal Federal Reserve Notes.
$3000.00
If you mean can I get a silver dollar for it from a bank? or a federal reserve? They stopped that in 1969. Late-date silver certificate bills (e.g. 1957 $1 bills) are common among collectors so they rarely sell for much more than face value. However some older ones can be worth more, but you need to know the bill's date, series letter, and denomination to determine its value.