Any one know what this is?

Discussion in 'Paper Money' started by Write2bfree, Mar 28, 2016.

  1. Write2bfree

    Write2bfree Active Member

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  3. stldanceartist

    stldanceartist Minister of Silly Walks

    Looks like a strap to me...
     
  4. Numbers

    Numbers Senior Member

    Brick label.

    Before the days of shrink-wrap, forty straps (4000 notes) of new currency would be placed between two wooden blocks, with a label like this on one end. The whole stack would be bound together with a couple of steel bands (it looks like you can still see the impressions from then on the wood a bit), and then wrapped in brown paper, with a second copy of basically the same label pasted on the outside.

    The label is probably worth a few bucks to somebody. If it had the first and last notes from the brick along with it, it'd be a "label set"; for a time such sets were somewhat popular to collect.
     
  5. Bucephalus

    Bucephalus Active Member

    Yes, it's a brick label as Numbers said. Today you'll see 10 BEP straps in shrink-wrap for 1000 consecutive notes.
    [​IMG] [​IMG]

    Your label says "4,000 5$ 1977A 20,000$"

    H47148001A - H47152000A

    No fancy serials in that range. What a boring brick.
     
  6. Write2bfree

    Write2bfree Active Member

    So this is nothing too on the back? [​IMG]
    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]


    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]
     
  7. Duke Kavanaugh

    Duke Kavanaugh The Big Coin Hunter

    They put that one the top and another on the bottom I believe of packs of currency.
     
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  8. Write2bfree

    Write2bfree Active Member

  9. Dean 295

    Dean 295 D.O.M.

    I have a similar brick label I purchased at Memphis sometime around the 1980's. I put in in a box and it has stayed there all this time. Not sure what I will do with it.
     
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  10. SteveInTampa

    SteveInTampa Always Learning

    Back in the day, the BEP used end labels pasted to wood plates to hold 4,000 note bricks together. They eventually changed, and eliminated the wood plates, and went with shrink wrap.....but they still use end labels.

    Early version label on wood plate, with first and last note.

    [​IMG]

    A more recent paper end label with bar code, with first and last note.

    [​IMG]
     
  11. fish4uinmd

    fish4uinmd Well-Known Member

    That's neat, thanks for sharing.
     
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  12. Bucephalus

    Bucephalus Active Member

    Ohh, and a Radar in that Brick

    J21744712D
     
  13. someconcerns

    someconcerns Member

    I had a buddy who was manager of a bank branch. This was in the era of the wooden "ends" for the bricks of 4000 notes and they tended simply to throw these in the trash can in the vault. Since they didn't want the tellers getting hurt cutting the metal straps, the BEP had switched to fiberglass strapping, from metal bands.

    Every time I went to visit one of my safe deposit boxes in said vault, they would let me take any of the brick ends in said trash can. So I have a medium-sized box full of those, with some of the reverse images of the bills they once held.

    Does anyone have an idea of the surrent value and who might deal in these?
     
    Last edited: Sep 23, 2016
  14. SteveInTampa

    SteveInTampa Always Learning

    I have not seen the end labels for sale without the first and last note included.

    I do not know a value, nor do I know anyone that deals with these.
     
  15. someconcerns

    someconcerns Member

    Steve, Acquiring the actual first and last notes was not an option at the time, unfortunately, as they already had been disbursed to the tellers. Did not even have the spare change - beyond what I needed to maintain or grow the coin collection - but I was also renovating a house over the same period of time. Some of the best coins sacrificed themselves for that house.
     
    NOS likes this.
  16. someconcerns

    someconcerns Member

    Recently, a fair number of brick ends have been offered on eBay. I did buy a few, but many people offering them have a somewhat inflated idea (in my lights) about their value. I, in turn, sold a lot consisting of one series 1976 $2 bill sealed in plastic (not my choice, I got it that way) from the Richmond FRB with a first day of issue cancellation at the Pentagon AND a top brick end from that series note from Richmond. Just not the brick which would have included the note. Given what the FDI notes sell for, I figure I was given close to $18 for the brick end. I'd guesstimate the value for a common brick end would be roughly $3-5 for a top with label and $1-2 for a bottom without a label.
     
    NOS likes this.
  17. SteveInTampa

    SteveInTampa Always Learning

    Personally, I have no interest in the labels when they do not include the first and last note from the brick.
     
  18. someconcerns

    someconcerns Member

    SteveInTampa, Understood. That is some of the attraction of collecting, whether coins, stamps or matchbook covers. Not everyone has the same taste, and that makes for interest by person 1 in something person 2 is willing to part with at what person 2 considers a great price and person 1 considers a bargain. They each may even feel they "pulled one over" on the other.
     
  19. someconcerns

    someconcerns Member

    Steve, Anyway, I'd like the brick ends with all the 4,000 bills in between. LOL
     
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