Technically all federally-issued bills are still valid, but in practice gold certificates and large-size bills (pre-1920s) would be extremely difficult to spend because no bank or store is set up to handle them.
And in any case, spending bills like that at face value wouldn't be a very good idea because they're worth more to collectors.
AnswerThe US didn't print any bills dated 1932.
It's almost a trick question, but not quite. Remember that the US still prints $2 bills! All you need is four $2 bills to make $8 plus any combination that adds up to the remaining $55: One $5 bill and one $50 bill, eleven $5 bills, three $5 bills and two $20 bills, and so on.
The US dollar is accepted everywhere. Including England.
No. The US has never printed a $3 bill. Any such thing is only a novelty.
Bills with denominations higher than $100 are no longer in circulation. The $500 note had the portrait of William McKinley on the face. The US Federal Reserve began taking high denomination bills out of circulation in 1969 and fewer than 1000 of most denominations are held by only collectors today.
Any accredited university in the US. Any accredited ROTC programme is also accepted.
No. The last silver certificates were 1957-series $1 bills. There weren't any US bills of any type dated 1958.
Please check again and post a new question. The US didn't print any bills dated 1936.
The answer's a double no. First, bills aren't minted; they're printed. Only coins are minted. Second, there were no US bills of any denomination with a 1954 series date.
The US didn't print any bills dated 1982.
The U.S. did not print any $1 bills with that date In fact, the U.S. didn't print any bills at all that are dated 1960.
there was apaper shortage
Please check again and post a new, separate question. The US didn't print any bills dated 1942. In fact, no US bills carry any series dates from the decade of the 1940s.
Yes. The US has never withdrawn or demonetized any bills except for gold certificates. 1995 and 1999 bills are sufficiently new that some of them remain in circulation.
Detonated means exploded like a bomb. Dollar bills don't explode.
The U.S. did not print any $1 bills with that date. In fact, NO U.S. bills have that date.
While there has been some (VERY) occasional speculation about issuing $200 bills, the US has never printed any bills with that denomination.