Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question including its denomination and seal color. The serial number isn't needed, however.
$65 to $95 depending on condition.
10 dollars
As of 08/2013, bills issued through the New York Fed district have a retail value of $25 to $35 in average condition; uncirculated ones can retail for over $150. Even though your bill reads "Federal Reserve Note" its brown seal indicates that it's a National Currency Note, a form of paper money discontinued during the Great Depression.
It depends on its condition. If well-worn, it's only worth face value. Slight wear might make it more valuable, say $130 to $140. Crisp and uncirculated might bring $175 at retail. It's actually not from New York. Like all bills at that time it was printed in Washington for distribution through the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. It carries the seal and letter of that branch of the Fed.
Two dollars. It's not from New York, though. Like all bills up to 1990 it was printed in Washington DC. It carries the seal and letter of the New York Federal Reserve District which distributed it.
The approximate value of funds held in the open market reserve account of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York is $496 billion.
Why does the Federal Reserve Bank of New York play a special role within the Federal Reserve System?
The second district in the Federal Reserve System is regulated by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. This includes New York, and part of New Jersey.
$65 to $95 depending on condition.
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York is not a publicly traded company and therefore does not have a ticker symbol.
10 dollars
The FRB of New York is the Federal Reserve Bank. It is a Reserve bank along with twelve banks in conjunction with the Board of Governors of Washington D.C. that make up the Federal Reserve System.
New York
No, only for the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
Federal Reserve New York
The responsibility of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York with regard to proposed bank mergers is to resolve issues emerging from such mergers.
The major debts that were owed to the Federal Reserve Bank in New York were repaid by Bear Stearns and AIG in 2012.