$2 notes were never discontinued. The major change was that they had been issued mostly as United States Notes, with red seals. After production of U.S. Notes ceased in the 1960s, all bills were then printed only as Federal Reserve Notes. Demand for $2 bills was low, so the first $2 FRNs weren't printed until 1976.
It will read "Federal Reserve Note" at the very top of the bill.
Federal Reserve Note. All US paper currencies are Federal Reserve Notes.
No, only for the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
All U.S. dollar bills have a letter A through L to indicate a Federal Reserve Bank branch where the bill was first issued. K refers to the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
Please don't assume that every old bill is a silver certificate. The banner across its top identifies your bill as a Federal Reserve Note only. There's more information at the question "What is the value of a 1914 US 50 dollar bill?" Federal Reserve Notes were very different from silver certificates and were never combined. Silver certificates were issued directly by the Treasury and were backed dollar-for-dollar with silver on deposit. Federal Reserve Notes are issued by the Federal Reserve Bank and are not backed with precious metal.
1914 $20 Federal Reserve Note.
It's still worth one dollar.
The green seal indicates your bill is a Federal Reserve Note. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1934 US 5 dollar Federal Reserve Note?" for more information.
The green seal indicates your bill is a Federal Reserve Note. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1934 US 5 dollar Federal Reserve Note?" for more information.
The reason a red seal $5 bill doesn't have a Federal Reserve letter on it is because the red seal version is NOT a Federal Reserve note. Red seal bills are United States notes.
five-hundred dollars
The green seal indicates that your bill is a Federal Reserve Note. Please see "What is the value of a 1928 D US 5 dollar Federal Reserve note?" for more information.