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100,000 dollars

US100000dollarsbillobverse US100000dollarsbillreverse

Obverse and reverse

General information
Country

Flag of the United States United States

Value

$100,000.00

Years

19341935

Appearance
Color

orange to gold

Obverse

Woodrow Wilson

Reverse

value, "United States of America"

v · d · e

The 100,000 dollar bill was issued by the United States Department of the Treasury in 1934 and 1935 for official transactions. The government stopped using these notes in the 1960s.

The note was orange to gold in color and was printed on cotton paper. It featured President Woodrow Wilson on its obverse and the note's value and state title of the United States on its reverse.

The note was a gold certificate and the highest denomination of United States currency ever produced. Only 42,000 of these notes were printed, and none were ever issued to the public. When the government stopped using the 100,000 dollar bill in the 1960s, many were destroyed. Today, only a handful of the notes are known to exist, and all are in the hands of the United States Government. As a result, the notes are illegal to privately own. Examples are displayed in the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, Bureau of Engraving and Printing, Smithsonian Institution, and the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond.

References

Template:USD

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