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Jan 30, 2013 7:54PM
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My father died in 1948 and I never knew him or any of his family.  His mother, my g-mother, however for many years sent a card with a $2 bill each Christmas and on my birthday.  I finally met her in 1965 a short time before her death.  I still have most of the twofers and over half are silver certificates.  I have no idea what they may be worth beyond the $40 or so face value.  For me, they are my only tangable link to a family I never knew.
Jan 30, 2013 6:06PM
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"The Treasury hasn't whipped up a batch of twofers since 2003."

Huh?  I'm currently holding a 2009 in my hand.
Jan 25, 2013 3:27PM
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Once, at a coin convention I attended in New Orleans I got to hold an uncut sheet of 12 $100,000 bills! It was in a large acrylic case and there were two very large guards on each side of me. $1.2 mill, in my hands, WOW.
Jan 25, 2013 3:57AM
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Binion's horseshoe casino in Las Vegas used to have a horseshoe shaped arbor you could stand under for a picture. The arbor was made up of 100 10k bills or 1 million $. Don't know if it's still there
Jan 30, 2013 6:18PM
Jan 30, 2013 8:54PM
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The $2 bill will increase in popularity only if the $1 dollar bill is eliminated as some want to do.  Since the value of the dollar has plunged over the years, it would make sense to reintroduce the $500 dollar bill, the euro has this denomination.  This won’t happen, however, due to the governments desire to eventually eliminate most currency in favor of electronic transactions, the better to track your expenses and see what you’re buying.

Jan 30, 2013 11:37PM
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Twofers are the currency of the gentlemen's clubs.... They need to keep printing them.
Jan 30, 2013 10:26PM
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The story of the woman trying to pay for her Walmart loot with a $1M bill has always floored me. I've met some stupid people, but whatever was going through her head is just baffling.
Feb 9, 2013 7:33AM
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What is the largest bill you can get from a bank
Jan 25, 2013 3:55PM
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Try spending a $100,000 bill to get some change and then some.........................
Jan 30, 2013 8:26PM
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I carry 3 $2.00 Jeffersons in my wallet for good luck! :-)
Feb 11, 2013 1:43PM
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Its too bad the author misses an opportunity to educate readers on the real purpose behind high denomination bills. It's really quite simple: Prior to 1934 - when people said the word money they understood it to be real gold or silver - just like the constitution says. All paper 'money' was merely a promissory note or due bill from the issuing institution (a specific bank, the Fed or US Treasury) hence the reason why we still call them NOTES or BILLS. The idea being that you could take a $10 bill into a bank and demand $10 in gold or silver coin. This is exactly what was happening in the early 1930s, and the reason why  so many banks failed, and the national government was in extreme peril of becomming bankrupt. That's why FDR called-in all the gold held by the public, had the Fed collect it for the government, and subsequently had the Fed turn it over to the government. The Fed got $100,000 bills in return (payable in gold), and the US had to build Ft. Knox to store it all.
I won't continue this line but will only point out that all paper money is really no more than a 'check' from the Fed - that's why big bills existed in the past. Because the seller would prefer a negotiable check from the bank - say a $500 bill - rather than a written check from an individual that may bounce. 
Feb 9, 2013 5:35AM
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The number on a bill means nothing. Ask and German at the end of WWii and they will tell you that a one million mark bill was needed to buy a few morsels of food.
Jan 30, 2013 10:36PM
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Bring back the $500 and $1,000 dollar bills....my wallet is stuffed too thick with $100s which makes it really hard to sit down comfortably in my Aston Martin DB9.....
Jan 30, 2013 11:24PM
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From wikipedia:
"The Series 1934 gold certificates (of denominations $100, $1,000, $10,000, and $100,000) were issued after the was repealed and gold was compulsorily confiscated by order of President on March 9, 1933 (see ), and thus were used only for intra-government transactions and not issued to the public." 
 
 Thus, the odds of a private citizen having possession of  $100,000 denomination are virtually ZERO.  The earlier issue United States Note in these high denominations were used in the same manner, for intra-government transactions only. 

Feb 11, 2013 3:24PM
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On a lighter note.  Won't be long before we stop talking about the dollar.  It will be worthless!
Feb 11, 2013 3:09PM
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If the $2 bill has not been produced since 2003, although the 2003A were produced later, why are there $2 with 2009 on them?
Jan 31, 2013 1:17AM
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Someone has found some $100,000.00 gold certificates. This is in reply to fdhf and nomorefastfood: if the Fed. Reserve Bank  has actually burnt all gold certificates $100,000 bills, how is it that some have recently been found amongst coral reefs by someone?  Or are there really be NONE left? The person who found them lives in very simple surroundings and is not knowledgeable regarding sources of information nor has he any internet facility. He is just hanging onto the bills not revealing them to anybody.  I know that carbon dating will not vaporize them for another 50 thousand years, but "what would you advise him to do with them?" , I was asked in confidence by his relative. 
Feb 11, 2013 2:44PM
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Bills larger than $100 will not be printed because that would make drug deals easier with the cartels.  That was expressed years ago when the $100 note got a make-over.  Now it has received another make-over and will be issued this year. Given that bills can be more easily counterfeited with all the new technology, the U.S. Treasury has to keep redesigning its bills.
Feb 9, 2013 7:00AM
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    In the early Fifties, my father received a $1000.00 bill as part payment of a house he sold.

    He got a lot of free cigarette's, after he told the store clerks that the $1000.00 bill was the 

only bill he had on him.

Feb 11, 2013 5:58PM
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We the sheeple aren't allowed to have these anymore.  Gov't has to be able to control and track our finances.  It's about the war on drugs, right ?
Feb 11, 2013 6:03PM
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"The Treasury hasn't whipped up a batch of twofers since 2003."

 

They were printed with "series 2009" on them. Get your facts strait!

Feb 11, 2013 5:10PM
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A few years ago I borrowed a few thousand dollars from a family member, when I was able to repay it, I tried to get thousand dollar bills from the bank as a kind of a joke and the bank told me they were not available. I don't understand why they would print them if they are not for general use.
Jan 30, 2013 6:58PM
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My great-grandfather received a call many decades ago from the Federal Reserve Bank in Kansas City.  They were destroying $100,000 bills and he knew someone that worked there.  They offered to sell it to him but he refused for some reason.  Would have been cool to have one in the family.  If only he had known the investment it would have been!
Jan 30, 2013 10:57PM
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MEMS  QUARTER DOLLAR  IS  BETTER.....
Jan 30, 2013 7:10PM
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It's 'safe' deposit box, not 'safety' deposit box.
Feb 11, 2013 6:11PM
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The Government figured out that it's easier to bring your cash to offshore banks when it comes in 100K, 10K and the rest, that's why they stopped making the large bills. 100K in 100 dollar bills is much more difficult to get out of the country then one bill worth 100K. It's all about having cash they don't know about. Now you know the real story behind the denominations printed and why.
Feb 11, 2013 6:42PM
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I remember seeing 500 and 1000 dollar bills often as a kid in the 80's.  I guess they should have been saved.  But who could save that much money back then.  Not my family.
Feb 9, 2013 5:58AM
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When I was in high school, I saw 3 1000 dollar bills. I worked fast food at a mall, and this kind of smarmy-looking guy pulled out his money clip to pay for his order. There were 3 1000-dollar bills on the outside of the bundle of cash. It was bizarre. I didn't even know that 1000 dollar bills existed. This would have been in 1986 or so.

 

Then about 13-14 years ago, I worked in a vault. I always checked serial numbers on bill packs from the bank, because I had a friend who was a collector, so I would pull bills with interesting serial numbers for him. At the bottom of an otherwise sequential bundle of 1000 singles, I found one bundle out of sequence. The singles had serial numbers from 1-100, all uncirculated bills. They had obviously been deliberately hidden in that bag of bills by (I can only assume) an employee at the mint. I bought the bundle and called a coin dealer, who called a few people. He called me back and said he had a buyer who had a buyer for them, and gave me 5 grand for them. I've often wished I had just held onto them, but at that time, I really needed the money. I hope never to find out what that bundle of bills might have actually been worth.

Feb 11, 2013 7:28PM
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The truth about these bills is that whilst the United States was on the "gold standard" (now all of which is in Fort Knox after being SEIZED by the government), and BEFORE the creation of the FDIC, BANKS had to "cover" for their amounts "on deposit " by federal law. SO, therefore, instead of packing HUGE bags with hundred dollar bills, they'd just use $1,000 bills or even $5,000 bills to transfer amongst themselves to be sure that they could "cover themselves" if they "went under" and customers came collecting.

Numismatists still collect this stuff--$500 and $1,000 dollar bills are EASY to find if you're a collector; the U.S. Mint keeps most of the $100,000 bills and higher currency and puts them on display. BUT, for the right price, a collector can usually find a "rogue bill" that was never turned in--sort of like the "stolen-artwork" market. Its just an underground "black market" and you can find what you like, if you're willing to pay. It's an interesting collector thing.
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