$5000 bills were printed for almost a century, but only infrequently during that time span. Series dates include:
The last series was actually printed as late as 1945, when production of all high-denomination bills was suspended due to low use. In July 1969 distribution through the banking system was halted in an effort to hamper money-laundering and other criminal schemes. The bills weren't formally withdrawn or demonetized but they've effectively been out of circulation for decades.
depends on the denomination of the dollar, a penny will take alot longer then 100 bills, also depends if you can count past 10
1979
20 dollars. The dollar bill is 6" long.
They would be 1000*300 millimetres = 1000*300/1000 metres ie 300 metres.
61400000
depends how long you are able to hang on to them!
a long time
i wish they had them. but no, and probably not for a long time or never
Yes it can if left in water for long periods of time.
Yes, old dollar bills issued by the U.S. Treasury remain valid for use in transactions as long as they are in good condition and not counterfeit.
4.3 inches, most heist movies make it seem like it would fill up a briefcase and such but it doesn't. In 20 dollar bills it is 21.5 inches, in 10 dollar bills it is 43 inches, in 5 dollar bills it is 86 inches, and in 1 dollar bills it is 430 inches. A dollar bill is .0043 inches so in turn to make a stack a mile long it would takeover 14 million bills.
About 1 hour and 47 mins.