If you're referring to US currency, the answer is yes. So-called "fractional currency" (i.e. denominations less than $1) was issued from 1862 to 1876, in part to alleviate coin shortages and to help pay for the Civil War. Denominations ranged from 3¢ to 50¢.
3
No, the smallest paper money denomination was the 3 cent fractional currency note printed during the civil war because of a shortage of coins.
It was the one hundred thousand (100,000) dollar bill. These bills were only used for intra-governmental money transfers. The largest circulation bill ever issued was ten thousand (10,000) dollars. Since 1945 it has been one hundred (100).
The highest denomination of money ever legally issued was the Hungarian 100 million b-pengö note of 1946, which was also worth a whopping 1020 or 100 quintillion Hungarian pengö. It must be understood that the b-pengö was merely a higher currency value than the regular pengö, much like what a dollar is compared to a cent.
The only woman to ever appear on U.S. currency (paper money) was Martha Washington in the 1880s and '90s. Then for U.S. coins, both Susan B. Anthony and Sacagawea have appeared on small dollars.
3
I would say yes. When has paper money ever held it's value?
they used it to well when they sold silk people would use paper money so there you have peeps paper money thank you thank you you've been a great.. well what ever by by
You can't make a bank in doodle god. Plus if you could you would need money+human=bank.
there was a 3 cent note back in the 1800s
Paper driving licences issued before 1998 are still legal documents in the UK. As of June 2015, paper counterparts are no longer legal documents and were only ever valid with the accompanying photocard.
No, the smallest paper money denomination was the 3 cent fractional currency note printed during the civil war because of a shortage of coins.
well you can make play money by getting a piece of paper and cut it into small rectangles and put $1 or $5 how ever you want it
Papyrus was the first paper ever invented by the Egyptions.
The largest denomination banknote ever officially issued for circulation was in 1946 by the Hungarian National Bank for the amount of 100 quintillion pengő (100,000,000,000,000,000,000, or 10^20; 100 million million million).
My guess is that you are talking about one that is actually worth the money written on the bill, and the answer is no. Checks are normally filled out to accommodate that much money because it can be canceled and traced through a bank account where a 100,000 dollar bill could be spent with no bank records of the money's existence.
Current paper money is issued in full-dollar denominations--$1, $2, $5, $10 and so on. However, during the Civil War a lot of coins were being hoarded so the U.S. did issue so-called "fractional currency" in a number of denominations as low as 3 cents. There's more information and pictures of fractional currency at the Related Link, below.