There's no "only year". The US printed $500 bills from 1862 through 1945, although the last run was all part of the 1934 series so even the ones printed in 1945 have the 1934 date (!)
No, a one dollar bill and a one hundred dollar bill are not made of the same material. One dollar bills are made of a combination of cotton and linen fibers, while one hundred dollar bills are printed on a special type of paper that includes a blend of cotton and linen with added security features.
The one hundred.
only if you have amazing counterfeiting talent :-)
Well first of all 2007 was 72 years after 1935. It is not possible for a 2007 five dollar bill to have around 72 years before it was made.
100 dollar bills were not made in a 1935. Post a new question with the correct date.
5 dollars. unless you made it
Beginning in 1992 with Five Dollar note, and completing the transition in 1996 with the One Hundred Dollar note, all Australian banknotes have been made from a polymer compound jointly developed by the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) and the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO).
The 1,000 dollar bill was discontinued in 1964.
There were no bills dated 1857 ever printed by the U.S. government.
That is actually not a million dollar bill note, but Millionbill.com makes million dollar bills.
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 last series was dated 1934, but it was printed until 1945. The Fed distributed them to banks as late as 1969.