No premium added by the serial number.
It's 10,000 numbers higher than the highest I have recorded, which is also the highest listed in S&L. The 1928A stars are $5 rarities. The guide...
The BEP had been using full-face (or back) dies since the 1880s.
"But I'm pretty sure that practice ended *long* before Series 1923...." Steel-roll ransfer plates was still a common process in the 1920s, but...
As Derek said, paper shrinkage caused the slightly different widths for both faces. There were no mules printed for $1 1923 SCs, and the...
It's an error bond: missing the 'R' from the red war bond legend printed along the bottom. <<Because they changed the design in '46?>> What do...
Under the 1789 Treasury Act, the register's and treasurer's offices were tasked with oversight of the nation's currency supply: the register was...
Currency paper is a proprietary material for the Treasury, and its distinctive status is protected by law. When the Treasury conducted these paper...
<<Chips theory is accepted by many. His theory was made after the writing of that book.>> Who is "Chip," and why haven't I seen his/her theory...
The Treasury changed from red to blue seals on 1914 FRNs because the red seals didn't wear well during circulation. The blue seals were more durable.
The BEP printed 1,872,012. The odd 12 were a special-order sheet printed in late-1933 or early-1934. The Treasury released just under 3,000 notes...
There is nothing "transitional" about this note. The definitive article appeared in Bank Note Reporter last year. The BEP concurrently printed...
The BEP printed 8,000 Series of 1933 $10 stars. We don't know the split between 1933 and Series of 1933A. I don't keep a census on these, but...
The Treasury valued its monetary silver at $1.29 per ounce. For every ounce they acquired, they minted $1.29 worth of silver dollars that they...
<<I've never understood how the government was able to legally retroactively stop honoring their silver certificates legally. The wording on the...
Separate names with a comma.