That's not an error. The phrase "In God We Trust" wasn't added to U.S. currency (paper money) until 1957.
This 1950 B series bill is a fairly valuable bank note. Fully uncirculated it can be valued between $100 and $100.
Please see related link
Please post a new question with the bill's denomination. Every denomination from $5 to $100 was printed in that series.
The E subseries had the lowest printing for 1950-series $10, $20, $50, and $100 bills. They were actually printed in the early 1960s and were soon superseded by the new 1963 series. For those denominations 1950-E bills are scarcer than 1950-dated bills with other series letters.
Counterfeit pens are unreliable and do not work on currency printed before 1959.
Suck Wiener
"E" is the highest series letter on any US $100 bill, and that was only for the 1950 series. You may be referring to the Federal Reserve District letter instead. The series letter, if any, on US bills is next to the date. In most cases a bill's date and series letter are more important than the district that distributed it. Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question with those two pieces of information.
In the 1950s, there were several different series of 10 dollar bills issued by the treasury. The series range from A through E, and have different values depending upon the series. For a series A 10 dollar bill, the value online is between 45 and 100 dollars, depending upon condition.
In the 1950s, there were several different series of 10 dollar bills issued by the treasury. The series range from A through E, and have different values depending upon the series. For a series A 10 dollar bill, the value online is between 45 and 100 dollars, depending upon condition.
No
100 dollars...idiot
1950-E $20, $50, and $100 bills were actually printed in the early 1960s, but were made in smaller quantities than earlier bills. All three denominations bring premium prices versus earlier series letters.