There are no signatures on a US 1 dollar bill. The dollar bill features the signatures of the Secretary of the Treasury and the Treasurer of the United States on the bottom right side. However, these signatures are printed rather than physically signed.
All current US bills feature the signatures of the Secretary of the Treasury and US Treasurer in office at the time the bill's "series" was started. The "series" is identified by the bill's date and what letter if any is next to the date. A new date is used when a new Secretary of the Treasury takes office. A new letter is used when a new US Treasurer takes office. It can be confusing. You have to know what series bill you have to determine whose signatures it will carry, but all bills within a specific series for a specific denomination will have the same signatures. However, different denominations may have different series so you need all three - date, letter, and denomination - to know whose signatures will be shown.
The U.S. did not print any $1 bills with that date. In fact, NO U.S. bills have that date.
The answer's a double no. First, bills aren't minted; they're printed. Only coins are minted. Second, there were no US bills of any denomination with a 1954 series date.
Secretary of the Treasury: Fred M. Vinson US Treasurer: W. A. Julian Despite the 1935 series date, the "B" subseries was printed during the first Truman Administration. 1935 B $1 bills were issued for exactly one year, from 07/23/1945 to 07/23/1946.
The Treasurer of the US and the US Secretary of the Treasury
US bills weigh 1 gram. There are approximately 453.59 g in a US pound. So either the answer is $453.
Washington's portrait has been on all US $1 bills issued since the early 20th century.
It would be 12 dollars if only have 12 1 dollar US bills
The US currently prints bills in the following denominations: $1, $2, $5, $10, $20, $50, and $100.
There were no differences in the reverse-side design of any 1957 US $1 bills. Please check your bills again and post a new, separate question with more details about the suspected differences.
One way to make 23 dollars with 5 bills and 3 coins is as follows: * 4 $5 bills * 1 $1 bill * 1 $1 coin (there are many $1 coins to choose from in the US) * 2 $0.50 coins (there is only one type of half-dollar coin in the US) 4 * $5 + 1 * $1 + 1 * $1 + 2 * $0.50 = $23 4 bills + 1 bill = 5 bills 1 coin + 2 coins = 3 coins
Please check again and post a new, separate question. The US didn't print any $1 bills dated 1933, only $10 bills.
4 bills 1 $50 2 $20 1 $1
The US issued $1 bills and $1 coins with that date. Please see the Related Questions for more information.
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. > The US didn't print $25 bills. > The last silver certificates were $1 bills dated 1957 > There were no US bills of any denomination dated 1961.
The 1935 A subseries of $1 bills was the longest within the longest series of any US bill. They were printed during the first half of the 1940s.