United States Treasury Bureau of Engraving and Printing.
Washington DC and Fort Worth TX.
The answer's a double no. First, bills aren't minted; they're printed. Only coins are minted. Second, there were no US bills of any denomination with a 1954 series date.
Bills have never been minted. Coins are minted, bills are printed. The first federally issued $1000 bills appeared in 1862, during the Civil War, when the government started to standardize currency.
Never, because bills are not minted. Coins are minted, bills are printed. The first federally-issued $5 bills were printed in 1862. They were red-seal United States Notes, a series that continued for a century. Before that $5 bills were issued by states and local banks, and there were also federal "demand notes" in that denomination.
There's more information at the Related Question.Two-dollar bills were never MINTED. Only coins are minted. Bills are printed.
Never, because bills are not minted. Coins are minted, bills are printed. Please see the Related Question for more information.
US paper money isn't "minted" anywhere. Only coins are minted, bills are printed.Paper money is printed by the Treasury Department's Bureau of Engraving and Printing. The BEP's main facility is in Washington DC, and there's a second printing plant in Fort Worth. Fort Worth bills have the small letter FW to the left of one of the plate position numbers.
The US didn't print any bills dated 1982. Please check again and post a new question. Also note that bills are printed, not minted. The US Mint only makes coins.
US paper money isn't "minted" anywhere. Only coins are minted, bills are printed.Paper money is printed by the Treasury Department's Bureau of Engraving and Printing. The BEP's main facility is in Washington DC, and there's a second printing plant in Fort Worth. Fort Worth bills have the small letter FW to the left of one of the plate position numbers.
Bills are printed. Coins are minted. All U.S. bills are printed at two facilities of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, one in Washington DC and the other in Fort Worth. Bills from Fort Worth are identifiable by a small "FW" in one or more corners.
US paper money isn't "minted" anywhere. Only coins are minted, bills are printed.Paper money is printed by the Treasury Department's Bureau of Engraving and Printing. The BEP's main facility is in Washington DC, and there's a second printing plant in Fort Worth. Fort Worth bills have the small letter FW to the left of one of the plate position numbers.
$10.-$15. depending on how worn it is.Note that bills are printed. Coins are minted.
Coins are minted, bills are printed.$2 bills are still being made, just not in very large quantities. As of this writing, the most recent series was started in 2013.