The last known count of existing $1000 US bills was 165,372, in May of 2009. These bills are not in circulation and are worth more than their face value to collectors.
There were no federally-issued $1000 bills dated 1887. However many private banks issued bills at that time. Please post a new, separate question with more information including the name of the issuing bank.
Bills have never been minted. Coins are minted, bills are printed. The first federally issued $1000 bills appeared in 1862, during the Civil War, when the government started to standardize currency.
no. 3 dollar bills never existed. 2 dollar bills were invented during the 1500s though.
None. There is no American 1000 dollar bill. Unless it is a fake.CorrectionEssentially none. Up till 1945 the US printed bills with values up to $10,000. The last series carried a 1934 date however. In 1969 all further distribution of high-denomination bills was suspended because they were being used to "launder" criminal activities. In addition banks were (and still are) required to send back to the Treasury any such bills that they receive in deposit. Because of that, effectively all high-value bills are long gone from circulation.
These bills are normally replicas with no collector value.
1000 bills.
1000/20=50 bills
1000 of them.
100 bills
how many times does 1000 dollars are in a million
100
1000
They would be 1000*300 millimetres = 1000*300/1000 metres ie 300 metres.
100
1000 / 50 = 20
1000000/1000=1000
The simplest combination - is 59 bills of 1000 value - plus one of value 500.