45% of dollar bills have been in strippers g-strings
None. And never have been. The $100,000 bill was intended only to be transferred between Federal Reserve centers and not circulated.
No, and if you attempt to deposit or exchange a "million dollar" bill you risk arrest because all such bills are fake. There's never been an American $1,000,000 bill. The highest-value bill printed for circulation was $10,000, and they were discontinued in 1945. The highest-value US bills ever printed was a set of $100,000 gold certificates that were only used inside the Federal Reserve System.
There's never been a federally-issued bill with that denomination. However the Continental Congress printed $30 bills at the time of the Revolution. During the 18th and early 19th centuries bills were issued by the states and private banks in addition to the federal government, so there were loads of oddball denominations like $80 notes, 1/6 of a dollar, and so on.There is no such a thing like such as a 30 dollar bill
The largest number found in dollar bills is the serial number. It is an eight-digit number which could theoretically go as high as 99,999,999OR . . .The poster could have been attempting to ask what the largest denomination is. If that was their intent, the answer is:Largest currently printed: $100Largest printed for circulation: $10,000, last printed in 1945 in the 1934 seriesLargest ever printed: $100,000, printed in 1934-35 for use within the government
No, The highest denomination currently printed is the $100 bill. Denominations higher than $100 were last printed in 1945, but all were dated 1934. High-value bills are technically still legal tender, but since 1969 banks have been forbidden to distribute them in an effort to combat money laundering.
Detonated means exploded like a bomb. Dollar bills don't explode.
1979
Yes, circulated two bills have been found to be more valuable. This is particularly talking about the two dollar bills (circulated) that are from around the 1900's.
None. They are nothing more than a regular 2 dollar bill that has been altered. And 2 dollar bills are not rare you can go to any bank and purchase them for, get this, 2 dollars.
If they are US two dollar bills, yes. Contrary to popular misunderstanding, $2 bills are and always have been legal tender. The denomination has never been discontinued. It's only printed in relatively small numbers (less than 1% of all currency) but that still amounts to hundreds of millions of bills.
There have never been actual $3.00 bills. There are still $2.00 bills printed, although comparatively very few
As of July 2010 no series 2009 or 2010 $2 bills have been printed.
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.
They are shipped to banks run by the Federal Reserve System.
There have been hundreds of fake 3 dollar bills with different portraits- and to the best of my knowledge, one REAL series of $3 bills. The REAL bills were bank notes issued by one bank. The St. Nicholas Savings Bank of New York. Yep- the REAL 3 dollar bills had a portrait of Santa Claus- also known as St. Nicholas.
Washington's portrait has been on all US $1 bills issued since the early 20th century.
No, you cannot. There has yet been a system developed that can accept physical bills and convert it to a format suitable for digital use.