Look at the plate number in the upper right corner. There will be a capital letter with a small number to the right of the number.
If there is a tiny "FW" on the left of the number the bill was printed in Fort Worth.
If not, it was printed in Washington, DC.
Ex. A bill might say D12 so you would know it was made in Washington. If it read FWD12 it would be from Fort Worth
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1 dollar
A dollar bill weighs about 1 gram.
25 cents 2 dimes and a nickel 1/4 of a dollar 0.25 dollars 1/40 of a 10 dollar bill 1/100 of a 25 dollar bill 1/400 of a 100 dollar bill 1/800 of a 200 dollar bill 1/1000 of a 250 dollar bill 1/2000 of a 500 dollar bill
Its history is that it was printed by a novelty company. They cost a couple of dollars and are used as joke items, a lot like the "$3" bills that are printed by the same companies. The US never printed a real million-dollar bill; the highest circulating denomination was $10,000 and the largest bills ever printed were special $100,000 gold certificates used for intra-governmental transactions.
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What is a 1 dollar bill from 1918 worth? It is: B3190318A Series of 1918 printed May 18, 1914
As of 2014, there is not a 1 million dollar bill, although there are novelty ones printed. The highest bill of currency is 100 dollars.
No. The US has never printed a 1 million dollar bill, and no US bills of any denomination are dated 1940.
There weren't any printed with that date.
Ulysses S. Grant is on the $50 dollar bill. This bill weighs about 1 gram, has an identifying watermark, and is printed on cotton and linen. It was first printed in 1861.
The U.S. never printed any $1 bills with that date.
The answer is easy - ALL "one million dollar" or "one billion dollar" bills are fake. They're novelty items you can buy in a gift shop or online for a few dollars. $1000 is the largest-denomination silver certificate ever printed. $10,000 is the largest bill ever printed for circulation. $100,000 is the largest bill ever printed, but these were never circulated.
1 dollar
Qs are printed as part of the serial number on older 1 dollar bills. It doesn't mean anything.
There were so many of these printed that in circulated condition its value is a dollar or less.
Two things. First, the U.S. has never printed a $1 million dollar bill, ever. Second, no genuine U.S. currency is printed in China.