The Federal Reserve District appears only on bills with green seals that say "Federal Reserve Note" on their front side. Older blue- and red-seal notes were not issued through the Federal Reserve System so they don't have the district.
There's a full description of the letters and districts at the BEP website:
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.
The signature on the one rupee currency note in India is that of the Finance Secretary of the Government of India. Unlike other denominations, the one rupee note is issued by the Ministry of Finance and not the Reserve Bank of India. Therefore, it features the signature of the Finance Secretary rather than the Governor of the Reserve Bank.
There are twelve Federal Reserve Banks, one in each of the twelve Federal Reserve Districts. The District boundaries follow state lines, with some exceptions:1st District, Boston. Connecticut (excluding Fairfield County), Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont2nd District, New York. New York State, twelve counties in northern New Jersey, Fairfield County in Connecticut, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands3rd District, Philadelphia. Eastern Pennsylvania, southern New Jersey, and all of Delaware4th District, Cleveland. Ohio, western Pennsylvania, eastern Kentucky, and the northern panhandle of West Virginia.5th District, Richmond. Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and most of West Virginia6th District, Atlanta. Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and parts of Louisiana, Mississippi, and Tennessee7th District, Chicago. Iowa and most of Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, and Wisconsin8th District, St. Louis. Arkansas and portions of six other states: Missouri, Mississippi, Tennessee, Kentucky, Indiana, and Illinois9th District, Minneapolis. Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, twenty-six counties in northwestern Wisconsin, and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan10th District, Kansas City. Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Wyoming, northern New Mexico, and Western Missouri11th District, Dallas. Texas, northern Louisiana, and southern New Mexico12th District, San Francisco. Nine western states--Alaska, Arizona, California, Hawaii, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, and Washington--and American Samoa, Guam, and the Northern Mariana IslandsThe nine digit number between the brackets on your check is the is the routing code for the bank the check will be drawn on. The first two number indicate which of the 12 Federal Reserve Districts the check will be processed at.
It was supposedly established to stabilize the economy. If you start to look into what's really happened you will find that the money flow has actually been LESS stable since the Fed took over. The current "economic crisis" has the same source of all of the major crises in U.S. history, contractioin of the money supply. The panic of 1907 was caused by a sudden contraction by powerful European banks and this was the excuse for creating the Fed in 1913. The Fed is controlled by the same financial cartel that created the 1907 panic. It is the only institution that could have caused a contraction of the money supply large enough to create the current "crisis". It seems obvious that history has repeated itself. A+ users...federal reserve act
A rise in currency will reduce exports because the exporters will find it expensive and vice versa
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.
Serial numbers are counters and security features, but don't help to ID a bill and rarely determine its value. What matters are: > The bill's date > Its seal color > Its condition > The letter, if any, next to the date > In some cases, the issuing Federal Reserve District if it's a Federal Reserve Note.
Modern US $1 and $2 bills still carry the old-style Federal Reserve seal that includes the district letter and name. It's the large circle on the left side of the bill's front.However older $1 bills (before 1963) and $2 bills (before 1976) weren't issued by the Federal Reserve System so they don't have any seal or district identifiers.
Money is given out by the reserve bank of the regarding currency region. For the United States this would be the Federal Reserve Bank or for the European Union this would be the European Central Bank.
The GI Bill
See the link below. Also, there is a category specifically for coins and currency that makes it a lot easier to find questions about, well, coins and currency.
To find out which federal district you live in, you can visit the website of the United States Courts, where they provide a tool to locate your federal district by entering your state or zip code. Additionally, you can check your local courthouse or consult legal resources that outline federal district boundaries. Local government websites may also have this information readily available.
The issuing district on a twenty dollar bill can be found by looking at the first letter of the serial number on the bill. Different letters correspond to different Federal Reserve Banks, which are located in various cities across the United States.
Determining which Federal Reserve bank distributed* a bill is sometimes easy and sometimes needs a bit of detective work.First and most trivially obvious, the bill has to be a Federal Reserve Note. If it says Silver Certificate, United States Note, or something else across the top it wasn't issued by the Federal Reserve System.Second, the bill's date, denomination, and design are important.If the bill is a $1 or $2 note, or any other bill dated before 1990, the issuing bank will be identified in the Federal Reserve seal, usually located on the left front. - Bills before 1928 have a letter and a number inside the seal, as well as the name and location of the bank written around the outside. The name and number correspond to the bank's district; see the list below.- Bills after 1928 have just a letter inside the seal, but the bank's name and location are still around the edge.$5 and higher bills after 1990 have a "generic" seal with no letter or name. Instead, the district number and letter are in the upper left hand corner of the front, and the letter is repeated as the second of the two characters in the serial number's prefix (got that??)The letter/number codes for each district are:A: BostonB: New YorkC: PhiladelphiaD: ClevelandE: RichmondF: AtlantaG: ChicagoH: St. LouisI: MinneapolisJ: Kansas CityK: DallasL: San Francisco(*) There's a lot of misunderstanding about where US bills are printed. Regardless of the Federal Reserve district location, ALL bills are printed either in Washington or Fort Worth (the latter since 1991). They're not printed by each bank.When a district determines that more currency is required for banking and commerce, they request a shipment from the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. Bills with the appropriate number and letter codes are printed for that district (or taken from stock) and shipped to the district's bank for distribution.
To find federal indictments in Missouri, you can visit the website of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Missouri, where many federal cases are filed. Additionally, the PACER (Public Access to Court Electronic Records) system allows you to search for court records, including indictments. Local news sources may also report on significant federal indictments. For comprehensive searches, you may also contact the clerk's office of the district court directly.
De la Rue machines, used for printing currency, are typically found in central banks or government facilities rather than commercial banks. In Michigan, you won't find these machines in regular banking institutions. Instead, they are primarily located at the U.S. Bureau of Engraving and Printing, which is responsible for producing U.S. currency. For specific information, contacting the Michigan branch of the Federal Reserve might provide more insights on currency production and handling in the area.
The St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank has this data online. I haven't checked other regional Federal Reserve Bank sites. Here is the link: http://research.stlouisfed.org/publications/usfd/page3.pdf