Yes. All US bills are printed by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing at two facilities. Bills printed in Washington DC don't have any special identification on them; those made at the Fort Worth facility have a small "FW" next to the plate position indicator which is a letter and a small number. For example a Washington bill might have a position indicator like B12 or D8 while a Fort Worth bill could have FWC6
FWIW, many people mistakenly believe the US Mint prints bills. Actually the Mint only makes coins and the BEP only makes bills. They're completely separate operations.
1862
No. It is only printed here. Otherwise it is counterfeit .
The ones that were printed today.
No, nor has a genuine million dollar bill ever been printed in any year.
The US never printed 100 dollar silver certificates with this date.
The us hasn't printed a silver certificate 2 dollar bill since 1899 all twos printed after that were either US notes or federal reserve notes.
A 100 dollar note is the largest.
1964
a long time ago
No US Million dollar notes were ever issued. You have a novelty item that sells for a couple of bucks in gift shops and dollar stores. The largest US bill ever printed for circulation was $10,000, and the largest ever printed (but not circulated) was $100,000.
No US $10 bills were printed with the 1998 date.
Three dollar bills exist but they were never issued by the US government, although the US issued a three dollar coin from 1854 to 1889. Earlier, some colonies printed three dollar bills. When banks were allowed to print money in the early days of the US, some printed legitimate, legal three dollar bills. The Confederacy also produced three dollar bills.