The U.S. did not print any $1000 bills dated 1933. Please check your bill and post a new question.
Please post a new question with more information. The US didn't print any $1000 bills (or any other denomination bills, for that matter) dated 1942.
The US didn't print any bills dated 1940. Please check again and post a new, separate question.
Federally-issued $1000 banknotes were printed from 1862 to 1945, although all bills from 1934 to 1945 carried the same 1934 series date. Printing was suspended due to low demand; at that time $1000 could purchase a reasonably well-equipped sedan or be a down-payment on a house. It was still possible to request them from a bank up till 1969. That year President Nixon suspended distribution of all bills larger than $100 in an effort to reduce money-laundering and other criminal activities. Large bills were never formally withdrawn and are technically still legal to spend, but they're worth more to collectors.
These bills are normally replicas with no collector value.
No
No. IIRC, they haven't been in print since the 1930s.
The U.S. did not print any $1000 bills dated 1933. Please check your bill and post a new question.
The U.S. hasn't printed $1,000 bills since the 1940s.
There are 0 United States 1,000 dollar bills unless it is fake
you would need 1000 hundred dollar bills
No, you can do it all in 100 dollar bills or 5 dollar bills.
They would be 1000*300 millimetres = 1000*300/1000 metres ie 300 metres.
Please post a new question with more information. The US didn't print any $1000 bills (or any other denomination bills, for that matter) dated 1942.
4.3 inches
1000 of them.
The US didn't print any bills dated 1940. Please check again and post a new, separate question.