No agency keeps track of the number of bills or coins with a specific date that are in circulation. It would be impossible to know how many are lost, damaged, squirreled away in drawers, etc. so that's really an unanswerable question.
A circulated 1950 D one-hundred dollar bill is worth about $140. If the bill was not in circulation, it can have a value of about $175.
It's possible, but anything printed that long ago and still exists has most likely been pulled from circulation by collectors.
Please check again and post a new question. The US didn't print any $1 bills dated 1950.
HAWAII-stamped bills were issued for use during WWII so any bill dated 1950 wouldn't be genuine.
The U.S. didn't print any $2 bills dated 1950. Please check again and post a new question.
A circulated 1950 D one-hundred dollar bill is worth about $140. If the bill was not in circulation, it can have a value of about $175.
It's possible, but anything printed that long ago and still exists has most likely been pulled from circulation by collectors.
Please check again and post a new question. The US didn't print any $1 bills dated 1950.
HAWAII-stamped bills were issued for use during WWII so any bill dated 1950 wouldn't be genuine.
No. US one dollar bills were not made in 1950.
The U.S. didn't print any $2 bills dated 1950. Please check again and post a new question.
The U.S. didn't print any $2 bills dated 1950. Please check again and post a new, separate question.
Yes, the US never printed a small sized (1928 and latter) silver certificate. In fact, all 1950-series $20 bills were issued as familiar green-seal Federal Reserve Notes.
The US didn't print any blue-seal $5 bills dated 1950. Please check again and post a new, separate question.
The E subseries had the lowest printing for 1950-series $10, $20, $50, and $100 bills. They were actually printed in the early 1960s and were soon superseded by the new 1963 series. For those denominations 1950-E bills are scarcer than 1950-dated bills with other series letters.
Please check your bill again. All 1950-series $20 bills were printed as Federal Reserve Notes with the familiar green seal color. The last red-seal $20 bills were dated 1914.
Please check again and post a new, separate question. No US $2 bills of any kind were printed in 1950 and the last $2 silver certificates were dated 1899.