The Treasury never printed that denomination. Standard bills during the 20th century were $1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 50, and 100 as today, along with high-value notes of $500, 1000, 5000 and $10,000, and a special $100,000 bill printed for use only within various government agencies.
Up till the early part of the 20th century private banks were chartered to print their own currency, and some produced what would be considered "oddball" denominations today. But without more information about your bill it's not possible to say anything more.
There are no signatures on a US 1 dollar bill. The dollar bill features the signatures of the Secretary of the Treasury and the Treasurer of the United States on the bottom right side. However, these signatures are printed rather than physically signed.
If the bill is dated before 1990, it was printed in Washington DC. For later bills, look to the right of the Treasury Seal. In very small print, there will be a letter and number such as D182 or H7, which indicates the plate position of that bill during printing. If there are the letters FW just before it, the bill was printed in Fort Worth. If not, then it was printed in DC.
An image of the U.S. Treasury building is featured on the back of a ten dollar bill. Alexander Hamilton, first U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, adorns the front of the bill.
No. The U.S. has NEVER printed a one million dollar bill.
1862
Yes, the Treasury printed $2 bills in the 2003 series, also 2005 and 2008.
The biggest US Dollar printed is the $100,000 bill, but this bill is only used in by Congress but mainly for when they are budgeting that years total budget, in which they have the National Treasury bring the money in and they essentially just give it right back to the Treasury.
There are no signatures on a US 1 dollar bill. The dollar bill features the signatures of the Secretary of the Treasury and the Treasurer of the United States on the bottom right side. However, these signatures are printed rather than physically signed.
All US bills carry the signatures of the Secretary of the Treasury and US Treasurer who were in office when the bill's series was first printed. As of 01/2013, the Secretary of the Treasury is Timothy Geithner and the Treasurer is Rosie Rios. Later in the year a new series will be printed when Jack Lew takes office as the new Secretary of the Treasury.
If the bill is dated before 1990, it was printed in Washington DC. For later bills, look to the right of the Treasury Seal. In very small print, there will be a letter and number such as D182 or H7, which indicates the plate position of that bill during printing. If there are the letters FW just before it, the bill was printed in Fort Worth. If not, then it was printed in DC.
The U.S. Treasury did not issued a one dollar bill dated 1937. Even if they had, the motto "In God We Trust" was not added to U.S. dollar bills until 1957.
All US bills carry the signatures of the Secretary of the Treasury and US Treasurer who were in office when the bill's series was first printed. As of 02/2012, the Secretary of the Treasury is Timothy Geithner and the Treasurer is Rosie Rios.
An image of the U.S. Treasury building is featured on the back of a ten dollar bill. Alexander Hamilton, first U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, adorns the front of the bill.
dont know but I just got one myself and am wondering the same thing
there are 17 ones on a dollar bill. with words and numbers.
The signatures on the current US $1 bill belong to Steven Mnuchin and Jovita Carranza. Mnuchin was the Secretary of the Treasury at the time the bill was printed, and Carranza was the Treasurer of the United States.
A 2001 20 dollar bill that has been printed wrong would be worth 40-50$