It will read "Federal Reserve Note" at the very top of the bill.
Federal Reserve Note. All US paper currencies are Federal Reserve Notes.
1914 $20 Federal Reserve Note.
The green seal indicates your bill is a Federal Reserve Note. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1934 US 5 dollar Federal Reserve Note?" for more information.
The green seal indicates your bill is a Federal Reserve Note. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1934 US 5 dollar Federal Reserve Note?" for more information.
five-hundred dollars
The green seal indicates that your bill is a Federal Reserve Note. Please see "What is the value of a 1928 D US 5 dollar Federal Reserve note?" for more information.
The green seal indicates that your bill is a Federal Reserve Note. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1950 C US 10 dollar federal reserve note?" for more information.
Your bill is actually called a Federal Reserve Note, like modern $20 bills, rather than "a bank note of Chicago". Chicago is simply the Federal Reserve District location that distributed the bill. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1928 US 20 dollar Federal Reserve Note?" for more information.
The US Mint only makes coins. Your bill was printed in Washington; Philadelphia is the location of the Federal Reserve bank that requested and distributed the bill. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1914 US 5 dollar Federal Reserve Note?" for more information.
Yes, a five hundred dollar federal reserve note has stuff on the back.
Please don't assume that every old bill is a silver certificate. The banner across its top identifies your bill as a Federal Reserve Note only. There's more information at the question "What is the value of a 1914 US 50 dollar bill?" Federal Reserve Notes were very different from silver certificates and were never combined. Silver certificates were issued directly by the Treasury and were backed dollar-for-dollar with silver on deposit. Federal Reserve Notes are issued by the Federal Reserve Bank and are not backed with precious metal.
The green seal indicates that it's a Federal Reserve Note. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1928 US 5 dollar Federal Reserve Note?" for more information.