After the war several types of Philippine guerrilla notes were redeemed. The redeemed notes were held by the Philippine government. In the mid...
It is a copy made by the Historical Products Company. The note is on the bogus note list at Crutchfields Currency.
Only the CC block on Hawaii notes started at 00000001. Although they may not look as sexy as a number 1 note you may be able to find "low...
Even with Mrs. Connelly it could no longer be redeemed. The Post Office ceased redeeming them in the 1980s.
Spurious means it was not a legitimate issue from this bank or the bank itself was not real.
Heritage shows one sale of this note. It is listed in the Wolka book of Ohio notes as a spurious issue. It sold for $49.00 and was from the Eric...
It is not a gray area. The data obtained by K3B when it graded notes belongs to K3B whether it graded the notes as PCGS or Legacy or any other...
But CU is not K3B. K3B graded the notes and K3B has the data. For better or worse, it belongs to them. Just as the data from before K3B took...
PCGS is a trade name. PCGS is not a corporation and owns nothing. Collectors Universe Inc. licensed the PCGS name to K3B Inc. for currency...
K3B, the PCGS licensee, that is now (maybe) operating as Legacy owns the rights to the data in the registry from the time it took over from CU.
Maybe 10% of the number issued in 1933.
The serial number ranges are in WWII Remembered, a must have book of you are into WWII paper money. They are also in Friedberg and the small size...
Only the C-C block started at 00000001.
Welcome. You didn't start with a Hawaii note?
MPC was introduced to segregate the US$ from the local economy. Currency control was a big problem during the early occupation due to...
I guess I have been doing it wrong for 30+ years. I thought rarity was the single most important thing when considering value.
The economy was on the brink of collapsing for several months at the end of 1907 and beginning of 1908. The effects of the Panic were felt for...
George McClellan's post inspired me to showcase some pieces issued during the Panic of 1907. The Panic was caused by a number of factors...
A catalog of notes from the Panics of 1893, 1907 and 1914 was published in 2017.
Yes. Desirable to the tune of about five grand based on similar items sold on Heritage Auctions.
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