Hmmm!!!??
You have to look at the hydraulic conditions.
If two checkvalves are mounted in series in such a way that the first valve reaches the cracking pressure, opens and let fluid pass to the second valve, the second will also open at the same (normal) cracking pressure.
(Two springs in series will not double the force needed to strech or compress)
If you put two checkvalves in parallell, either in a common chamber, or in parallell pipelines fed from the same fluid source, both will open at the same (normal) cracking pressure, under the condition that the flow is large enough to maintain the cracking pressure if one opens a bit before the other.
(Two springs in parallel will double the force if pressed by a common plate/area. In this hydraulics valve-case you will have a common fluid pressure, maintained from outside, giving equal pressure working at two equal valve areas)