The last U.S. $500 bills were dated 1934, and were printed up through 1945.
High-denomination bills were last printed in 1945 and officially discontinued on July 14, 1969 in an effort to combat organized crime. Despite being printed in 1945 the bills were part of the 1934 series so they all carry that date.
The $2 bill has not been discontinued. New ones are printed as needed. The most recent series is dated 2008.
No $50 bills were printed in 1933 due to the Great Depression, and the last $50 silver certificates were printed in the 1891 series.
The first $1 silver certificates were printed in 1886. The last bills were in the 1957-B series which actually ran to about 1965, because modern US bills are dated by their "series" rather than when they were printed. The Related Link shows dates and values for most US $1 bills issued since the Civil War.
The last bills with denominations higher than $100 were printed in 1945, but they carried a series date 1934.
Please check again. The last $5 silver certificates were printed in 1953. NO bills were printed with the date 1961.
The last U.S. $500 bills were dated 1934, and were printed up through 1945.
High-denomination bills were last printed in 1945 and officially discontinued on July 14, 1969 in an effort to combat organized crime. Despite being printed in 1945 the bills were part of the 1934 series so they all carry that date.
The $2 bill has not been discontinued. New ones are printed as needed. The most recent series is dated 2008.
No $50 bills were printed in 1933 due to the Great Depression, and the last $50 silver certificates were printed in the 1891 series.
The percentage of each denomination varies widely from year to year, but over time $2 bills have made up about 1% of all bills. Interestingly, perhaps due to their use by transit systems, as part of promotions, and/or at some national parks, the number of $2 bills printed has increased slightly over the last decade. The most recent printings were in the 2009 and 2013 series.
The largest number found in dollar bills is the serial number. It is an eight-digit number which could theoretically go as high as 99,999,999OR . . .The poster could have been attempting to ask what the largest denomination is. If that was their intent, the answer is:Largest currently printed: $100Largest printed for circulation: $10,000, last printed in 1945 in the 1934 seriesLargest ever printed: $100,000, printed in 1934-35 for use within the government
The last bills with denominations higher than $100 were printed in 1945, but they carried a series date 1934.
The last bills with denominations higher than $100 were printed in 1945, but they carried a series date 1934.
The first $1 silver certificates were printed in 1886. The last bills were in the 1957-B series which actually ran to about 1965, because modern US bills are dated by their "series" rather than when they were printed. The Related Link shows dates and values for most US $1 bills issued since the Civil War.
The last silver certificates were printed with the date 1957. All green-seal dollar bills are worth face value only, unless they're uncirculated.