As of 31Dec90 GBP1 was worth USD1.9350 starting 1990 on 01Jan90 at 1.6060.
The 1990 Eisenhower Commemorative Dollar was issued in proof and in mint state condition. The value of each of them ranges between $20 - $30.
The approximate value of your coin according to Numismatic News Coin Market Monthly Price Guide for March 2007: 1990 Silver Eagle = $18.00
Do you mean the circulating dollar coin minted from 1971 to 1978, or the commemorative coin issued in 1990? The circulating coins are worth only a dollar each. The commemoratives are worth about $15.
The U.S. made no dollar coins in 1990.
$50
A date is needed. Please see the question "What is the value of a (date) US 20 dollar bill?" for more information.
Except for those with printing errors, all modern-date bills are worth only face value unless they're uncirculated.
Atlanta is the seat of the US Federal Reserve district that distributed the bill, not where it was printed. Up till 1990 all US bills were printed in Washington DC. For more information about its value, please see the Related Question.
Two dollars. It's not from New York, though. Like all bills up to 1990 it was printed in Washington DC. It carries the seal and letter of the New York Federal Reserve District which distributed it.
There is no "J" series. The series letter is next to the date and corresponds to the Treasury Secretary and/or Treasurer who were in office when the bill was printed. "J" is almost certainly the Federal Reserve Bank indicator letter. In any case, your bill is worth face value only.
It was printed in Washington. Richmond is the Federal Reserve District that ordered the bill and distributed it. There's more information at the Related Question. Until 1990 all US banknotes were printed in Washington. That year, a second facility was opened in Fort Worth. Each Federal Reserve district requests a print run of denominations needed in its jurisdiction, and the Bureau of Engraving and Printing prints bills with that district's letter (and before 1990, its city name).
US $50 dollar bills have been printed in dozens of series from 1862 to the present. Because series dates stay the same until a new series starts, bills are almost always printed every single year although they carry the date when the series began. The main series dates and bill types are: 1862 United States Note 1863 United States Note 1863-64 Compound Interest Treasury Note 1869 United States Note 1870-75 National Gold Bank Note 1874 United States Note 1875 United States Note 1878 United States Note 1878 Silver Certificate 1880 Silver Certificate 1880 Silver Certificate 1880 United States Note 1880 United States Note 1882 Gold Certificate 1882 Gold Certificate 1891 Treasury Note 1891 Silver Certificate 1891 Silver Certificate 1913 Gold Certificate 1914 Federal Reserve Note 1914 Federal Reserve Note 1918 National Currency/FRBN 1922 Gold Certificate 1928 Gold Certificate 1928 Federal Reserve Note 1928A Federal Reserve Note 1929 National Currency 1929 National Currency 1934-1934D Federal Reserve Note 1950-1950E Federal Reserve Note 1963-1963A Federal Reserve Note 1969-1969C Federal Reserve Note 1974 Federal Reserve Note 1977 Federal Reserve Note 1981-1981A Federal Reserve Note 1985 Federal Reserve Note 1988 Federal Reserve Note 1990 Federal Reserve Note 1993 Federal Reserve Note 1994 Federal Reserve Note 1996 Federal Reserve Note 2001 Federal Reserve Note 2004 Federal Reserve Note 2006 Federal Reserve Note 2009 Federal Reserve Note 2013 Federal Reserve Note
If this is asking the value of a 1990 half dollar, it's worth 50 cents.
US $100 bills have been printed nearly every year since the denomination was introduced during the Civil War. However US bills carry what are called "series" dates rather than printing dates that are changed only when there's a modification to a bill's design or its signers. The primary series dates for $100 bills are: 1861-65 - Interest Bearing Note 1862 - United States Note 1863 - United States Note 1863-64 - Compound Interest Treasury Note 1869 - United States Note 1870-75 - National Gold Bank Note 1874 - United States Note 1875 - United States Note 1878 - United States Note 1878 - Silver Certificate 1880 - Silver Certificate 1880 - United States Note 1882 - Gold Certificate 1890 - Treasury Note 1891 - Treasury Note 1891 - Silver Certificate 1914 - Federal Reserve Note 1918 - National Currency/FRBN 1922 - Gold Certificate 1928 - Gold Certificate 1928,28A - Federal Reserve Note 1929 - National Currency 1934,34A-D - Federal Reserve Note 1950,50A-E - Federal Reserve Note 1963A - Federal Reserve Note 1966,66A - United States Note 1969,69A,69C - Federal Reserve Note 1974 - Federal Reserve Note 1977 - Federal Reserve Note 1981,81A - Federal Reserve Note 1985 - Federal Reserve Note 1988 - Federal Reserve Note 1990 - Federal Reserve Note 1993 - Federal Reserve Note 1996 - Federal Reserve Note 1999 - Federal Reserve Note 2001 - Federal Reserve Note 2003,03A - Federal Reserve Note 2006 - Federal Reserve Note 2009,09A - Federal Reserve Note 2013 - Federal Reserve Note
Current value of a 1990 Eisenhower Centennial dollar is $23.00-$25.00.
No US $1 bills are dated 1990.