Yes, it means that the bill is a "replacement note" printed to replace a bill that was damaged during the printing process before it was delivered to the Federal Reserve system.
There have been several novelty "million-dollar bills" printed privately; one of the designs claims to be a "millennium note." These are not legal tender; trying to cash or deposit one at a bank could get you charged with counterfeiting. (In fact, one evangelistic organization that has a million-dollar bill design for a tract is facing claims that the tracts are counterfeit bills.) There has never been a legal tender million dollar bill.
There is no such thing as a modern $3 bill. There were some odd-denomination bills issued by private banks in the 19th century but you would have to specify which bank and what date to have any idea of its value. If it's in decent condition, any of the bank-issued $3 notes (or any other denomination for that matter) will be fairly valuable.
There was no such thing as a dollar at the time.
There is no such thing as a "Morgan $2 bill". George T. Morgan designed coins, not bills. Most red seal $2 bills are worth only a few dollars above face value, although they can retail for higher prices if in uncirculated condtion. Given that situation, sequential serial numbers add little or nothing to their value.
No such thing. If you mean a 1968 Washington QUARTER, it's still worth 25 cents. If you mean a '68 KENNEDY half dollar, it's worth around $4 because of its silver content.
There is no such thing
Yes there are $20 dollar bills. I see hundreds of them a week. If you meant 2 dollar bills there are those also I see a few of them a week also.
There is no such thing as a modern $3 bill. There were some odd-denomination bills issued by private banks in the 19th century but you would have to specify which bank and what date to determine anything more about it.
Three $1 bills are worth $3. If instead you're asking about the value of a $3 bill, there's no such thing.
Not really. Before the Federal Reserve System, some banks made three-dollar bills, which were legal tender at the time. During the civil war, the confederacy printed three-dollar bills. There has never been a United States 3-dollar bill though.
There is no such thing as a $1Million dollar bill in US currency. There are some countries that have 1 Million unit bills.
No. The US has never printed a $3 bill. Any such thing is only a novelty.
It's just an expression: "As Queer As A One-Dollar Bill...." One dollar bills are especially common--the most common dollar bill at all: Normal.
No, but there were 1000 dollar bills. Please see the Related Question for more details and the exact spelling.
There is no such thing as a real million dollar bill, the largest dollar bill is a $100000 note, a gold seal note to be exact. However, there are pranks bills that are a "million dollars"
There are no $3, $1500, or $50,000 bills in circulation in the US. There is no such thing as a modern $3 bill. There were some odd-denomination bills issued by private banks in the 19th century but you would have to specify which bank and what date to have any idea about its design.
go to a coin and dollar museumCorrectionA coin museum won't have information about banknotes, and there's no such thing as a "dollar museum". You have to know several things about the bills: > Their dates> What letter if any is next to or below the date> What color their seals areFor older bills you often need to know what bank or Federal Reserve district issued them, how worn they are, and other things that depend on the individual bill.