Nonexistent. There has never been a 1 million Dollar Federal Reserve Note.
1000000.
The FEDERAL RESERVE is a private corporation that was given powers by the FEDERAL GOVERNMENT to print all the 'so-called' Money and then loan it back to us with interest attached. To get an in depth look at what the FEDERAL RESERVE is and what they do, VISIT THE BELOW LINKand watch the videos they have there. They interview the spokesman for the FEDERAL RESERVE and he tells all kinds of interesting stuff about how the private corporation operates.
old
1000000
A denomination is needed. Please look for questions in the form "What is the value of a 1928 A US [denomination] dollar Federal Reserve Note?" for specific information.
no one knows
1000000/2 = 500000 = 500,000
3244.22 x 1000000 = 3244220000 = 3,244,220,000
All current circulation bills are Federal Reserve Notes so depending on the dates you're interested in you can simply look in your wallet. Older dates of Federal Reserve Notes (before 1999 depending on denomination) and all silver certificates are pretty much out of circulation though, so you'd need to look on eBay, go to a coin and currency show, or visit a dealer.
Nobody Knows!!
Look at the bottom of your checks, and you will see a series of numbers. At the far left bottom, read the first two digits -- this denotes your Federal Reserve district. For example, the lower left of my checks begin with 0829...... My Federal Reserve district is 08. You can then go to www.federalreserve.com and look up district 8 to get the headquarters of that district and contact information. Each bank's routing number begins with the two digits of their district. There are 12 total districts in the U.S.
Please take another look at your bill and post a new, separate question. It can't match either part of the description:There were no $2 bills dated 1929.The first $2 Federal Reserve Notes were released in 1976.