Want this question answered?
Sure, they're valuable. Money is money, regardless the form: paper note or coins.
Yes and it was once used for money in order to back up paper money.
a word that means to have two metals as the basis of money is coinage as opposed to paper bills that which are called banknotes.
Yes - consecutive serial numbers make them more valuable, when sold.
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credit cards debit cards cheques paper money gold valuable stones coins
Due to the insufficient amount of gold coin paper money was used instead. In the Confederacy also Postage stamps were used as paper money.
it is the US currency and is signed by the Treasurer and Secretary of Treasury in Washington D. C.
Early forms of money included coins. The coins were made from metals available in those ages.
Genuine examples are fairly valuable, but the market is saturated with replicas. It's impossible to give a specific value without knowing details about the note.
No, the money feels like the blank piece of paper you use, so when you give it to the cashier they are going to figure out that it feels like plain paper instead of the cotton feeling
The US financed the war in a great number of creative ways. The US took paper money and metals for example.