No. The Treasury Dept. doesn't have an online gift shop.
The currency used in America is the American dollar. It is in one dollar bills, five dollar bills, tens, twenties, fifties and hundreds,
You can exchange 20 dollar bills for 1 dollar bills at a bank or a currency exchange service.
You can exchange 20 dollar bills for 100 dollar bills at a bank or a currency exchange service.
Currency markers do work on 100 dollar bills. They also work on 10's and 1's.
Texas uses dollar bills as their currency.
Yes. US paper currency is 25% linen and 75% cotton. Check out the US Treasury site linked below.
Treasury bills are not physically printed. They are issued electronically through the Bureau of the Fiscal Service within the U.S. Department of the Treasury. Treasury bills are sold at regular auctions to finance the government's borrowing needs.
For modern bills, the Treasury Department seal is green and underneath the large word TWENTY on the right-hand side of the bill's face.
You can exchange old US dollar bills for new currency at most banks, credit unions, or the Federal Reserve.
Yes
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"500 hundred" would be 50,000. There has never been a 50,000 dollar bill. There were a few $10,000 bills printed, and an even smaller number of $100,000 bills, used only for transactions between federal reserve banks. There also was a $500 dollar bill, which may be what you're asking about. None of these bills are still in circulation. They're still technically legal US currency, but the treasury department has been removing them from circulation for over 40 years now and they're worth considerably more than face value to collectors. The highest denomination of US currency still being printed is the $100 bill, and it's unlikely the treasury will ever authorize the printing of larger denomination bills again (there's no longer any legitimate need for them; large currency transfers are now done electronically, and the only people large denomination bills would really help are drug lords and counterfeiters).