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1976 $2 FRN - 25 CONSECUTIVE - NEW YORK *GEM*
1976 $2 FRN - 25 CONSECUTIVE - NEW YORK *GEM*

Status

ActivePaper Money: US > Small Size Notes > Federal Reserve Notes

Price

$83.00

Bid Count

0

End Time

1/8/2009 6:40:04 PM EST
7m 48s
1976 $2 FRN - 60 CONSECUTIVE - NEW YORK *GEM*
1976 $2 FRN - 60 CONSECUTIVE - NEW YORK *GEM*

Status

ActivePaper Money: US > Small Size Notes > Federal Reserve Notes

Price

$200.00

Bid Count

0

End Time

1/8/2009 6:41:05 PM EST
8m 49s
1963 $2 legal tender RED SEAL note, CGA, AU 58, 2 of 3
1963 $2 legal tender RED SEAL note, CGA, AU 58, 2 of 3

Status

ActivePaper Money: US > Small Size Notes > Federal Reserve Notes

Price

$17.95

Bid Count

1

End Time

1/8/2009 6:57:50 PM EST
25m 34s
1963 $2 legal tender RED SEAL note, CGA, CU 64, 1 of 3
1963 $2 legal tender RED SEAL note, CGA, CU 64, 1 of 3

Status

ActivePaper Money: US > Small Size Notes > Federal Reserve Notes

Price

$19.99

Bid Count

1

End Time

1/8/2009 7:03:01 PM EST
30m 45s
(10) 1963 B $1. 00 FRN UNC CONSEC BARR NOTES
(10) 1963 B $1.00 FRN UNC CONSEC  BARR NOTES

Status

ActivePaper Money: US > Small Size Notes > Federal Reserve Notes

Price

$150.00

Bid Count

0

End Time

1/8/2009 7:03:04 PM EST
30m 48s

This item is no longer available.

$1000 1934A BOSTON PCGS 64PPQ UNDERGRADED NO RESERVE

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Curent Price

3800 USD

Item #

330286311824

Status

Completed

Condition

Circulated

End time

11/23/2008 9:44:00 PM (EST)

Ships From

east coast

A museum item, if indeed acquired by a museum, will forever be out of private hands. A remarkable note that is one of the most fantastic high denomination notes we have ever seen.

545.jpg picture by 08833

A more handsome well balanced note is unimaginable.

The chance of a lifetime. Opportunity! 

Today, the currency of the United States, the U.S. dollar, is printed in bills in denominations of $1, $2, $5, $10, $20, $50, and $100.

At one time, however, it also included five larger denominations. Shown here is a $100,000 Gold certificate from 1934. High-denomination currency was prevalent from the very beginning of U.S. Government issue (1861). $500, $1,000, and $5,000 interest bearing notes were issued in 1861, and $10,000 gold certificates arrived in 1865. There are many different designs and types of high-denomination notes.

The high-denomination bills were issued in a small size in 1929, along with the $1 through $100 denominations. Their designs were as follows:

The reverse designs featured abstract scrollwork with ornate denomination identifiers. All were printed in green, except for the $100,000. The $100,000 is an odd bill, in that it was not generally issued, and printed only as a gold certificate of Series of 1934. These gold certificates (of denominations $100, $1,000, $10,000, and $100,000) were issued after the gold standard was repealed and gold was compulsorily purchased by presidential order of Franklin Roosevelt on March 9, 1933 (see United States Executive Order 6102), and thus were used only for intra-government transactions. They are printed in orange on the reverse. This series was discontinued in 1940. The other bills are printed in black and green as shown by the $10,000 example (pictured at right).

Although they are still technically legal tender in the United States, high-denomination bills were last printed in 1945 and officially discontinued on July 14, 1969, by the Federal Reserve System.[1] The $5,000 and $10,000 effectively disappeared well before then: there are only about 200 $5,000 and 300 $10,000 bills known, of all series since 1861. Of the $10,000 bills, 100 were preserved for many years by Benny Binion, the owner of Binion's Horseshoe casino in Las Vegas, Nevada, where they were displayed in a glass case. The case is no longer there, and the bills were sold to collectors.

Circulation of high-denomination bills was halted in 1969 by executive order of President Richard Nixon, in an effort to combat organized crime.

For the most part, these bills were used by banks and the Federal Government for large financial transactions. This was especially true for gold certificates from 1865 to 1934. However, the introduction of the electronic money system has made large-scale cash transactions obsolete; when combined with concerns about counterfeiting and the use of cash in unlawful activities such as the illegal drug trade, it is unlikely that the U.S. government will re-issue large denomination currency in the near future. According to the US Department of Treasury website, "The present denominations of our currency in production are $1, $2, $5, $10, $20, $50 and $100... Neither the Department of the Treasury nor the Federal Reserve System has any plans to change the denominations in use today."

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