1929 (J-Kansas City) $50 Brown Seal FRBN VF (Fr#1880-J)

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A solid example of a National Currency (Federal Reserve Bank Note) $50 issued by the Kansas Federal Reserve Bank. Graded as Choice Very Fine. Superb note for a high-grade National Currency type set.
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Add this affordable $50 Federal Reserve Bank Note to your cart today!
Small size Federal Reserve Bank Notes were printed as an emergency issue in 1933 using the same paper stock as National Bank Notes. They were printed in denominations of $5.00 through $100. A National Bank Note has a line for the national bank's president's signature.
The small size Federal Reserve Bank Note printed a bar over the label for this line since Federal Reserve Banks had governors, not presidents. The wording also was changed to add, "Or by like deposit of other securities" after the phrase, "Secured by United States bonds deposited with the Treasurer of the United States of America." The twelve Federal Reserve Districts also appear on the bills as black alphabetically sequenced letters, from "A" to "L," a system essentially followed today on the $1.00 bill.
- Features brown seals and serial numbers.
- Graded as Choice Very Fine.
- This note is housed in an inert mylar currency sleeve.
- Jones/Woods signatures—Friedberg #1880-J.
- All small size $50 Federal Reserve Bank Notes had relatively low numbers printed.
- Face: A portrait of President Ulysses S. Grant.
- Back: An engraving of the U.S. Capitol Building.
Add this affordable $50 Federal Reserve Bank Note to your cart today!
Small size Federal Reserve Bank Notes were printed as an emergency issue in 1933 using the same paper stock as National Bank Notes. They were printed in denominations of $5.00 through $100. A National Bank Note has a line for the national bank's president's signature.
The small size Federal Reserve Bank Note printed a bar over the label for this line since Federal Reserve Banks had governors, not presidents. The wording also was changed to add, "Or by like deposit of other securities" after the phrase, "Secured by United States bonds deposited with the Treasurer of the United States of America." The twelve Federal Reserve Districts also appear on the bills as black alphabetically sequenced letters, from "A" to "L," a system essentially followed today on the $1.00 bill.
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