Order $2 Bills From Bank Of America

Current denomination of United States currency

Two dollars
(United States)
Value $two.00
Width 6+
964

inches ≅ 156 mm
Height 2+
3964

inches ≅ 66.three mm
Weight Approx. ane[i] yard
Security features Security fibers, raised printing
[2]
Material used 75% cotton
25% linen
Years of printing 1862 (1862)-1966 (1967),
1976 (1976)-Present (Federal Reserve Notation, current form)
Obverse
US $2 bill obverse series 2003 A.jpg
Pattern Thomas Jefferson
Pattern date 1928
Reverse
US $2 bill reverse series 2003 A.jpg
Design Trumbull’south
Declaration of Independence
Design date 1976

The
Us 2-dollar beak
($ii) is a current denomination of United States currency. A portrait of Thomas Jefferson, the third president of the United States (1801–1809), is featured on the obverse of the note. The contrary features an engraving of the
circa
1818 painting
Annunciation of Independence
by John Trumbull.

Throughout the $2 neb’s pre-1929 life as a big-sized note, it was issued as a U.s.a. Annotation, National Banking company Notation, Argent Certificate, Treasury or “Money” Note, and Federal Reserve Bank Note. When U.South. currency was changed to its current size in 1928, the $2 bill was redesigned and issued just as a United States Note. Production continued until 1966 (1967), when United States Notes were phased out, and the $2 denomination was discontinued until 1976, when it was reissued every bit a Federal Reserve Note with a new reverse design.

Equally a result of banking policies with businesses that have resulted in depression product numbers due to lack of use, two-dollar bills do not circulate every bit widely every bit other denominations of U.S. currency. This comparative scarcity in circulation, coupled with a lack of public knowledge that the beak is however in production and circulation, has besides inspired urban legends about its authenticity and value and has occasionally created issues for those trying to use the pecker to make purchases. The credible scarcity of the $ii bill, in spite of its product figures, too indicates that big numbers of the notes are removed from circulation and collected by many people who believe the bill to be rarer and more than valuable than it actually is.[3]

Denomination overview

[edit]

Authorized under an human action by the United States Congress, the first two-dollar bill was issued in March 1862[4]
and the denomination was continuously used until 1966; by that time, the U.s.a. Note was the only remaining grade of U.South. currency to which the 2-dollar bill was assigned. In August 1966, the Treasury Section discontinued production of the
$ii
and
$5
denominations of United States Notes. While the
$five
denomination had been issued simultaneously every bit a Federal Reserve Note, a United States Note and a Silver Certificate, the
$ii
denomination was non immediately reassigned to the Federal Reserve Note class of Usa currency, thus was fully discontinued. The Treasury cited low usage of the 2-dollar bill as the reason for not immediately resuming apply of the denomination. Production of the two-dollar denomination was resumed in December, 1975, and the 2-dollar bill was finally reissued in the jump of 1976 as a Federal Reserve Note with a new reverse design featuring John Trumbull’s depiction of the drafting of the Us Declaration of Independence, replacing the previous design of Monticello. The two-dollar note has remained a electric current denomination of U.S. currency since that time.[five]
As estimated at the time, if 2-dollar notes replaced most one-half of the one-dollar notes in circulation, the federal government would be able to relieve well-nigh

$26
million

in 1976 dollars ($124 million
adjusted for inflation)[6]
over the flow from 1976 to 1981, due to reduced production, storage, and aircraft costs.[vii]

Withal, due to their limited use, two-dollar notes are not printed as frequently in a new serial as other denominations, which are produced co-ordinate to demand.[8]
Most bill acceptors found in vending machines, self checkout lanes, transit systems, and other automated kiosks are configured to accommodate ii-dollar bills, even if the fact is non stated on the label.[9]
Although they are more often than not available at nearly banks, two-dollar notes are usually not handed out except upon specific request by the customer, and may require the teller to make a trip to the vault, or order the desired amount if not present at the co-operative.[x]

Rarity

[edit]

Printing
$ii
bills is one-half as expensive for the government as printing
$1
notes, since they both cost the same amount (vi.ii cents per bill) to manufacture,[11]
simply the public has not circulated them equally widely. During the Corking Depression, few Americans had enough money to crave
$two
notes. In the center of the 20th century,
$2
bills were often used for betting on horse racing, tips at strip clubs, and allegedly for bribery when politicians were seeking votes (though this is possibly an urban legend), and supposedly acquired a negative reputation. During World War 2 and later, US servicemen were frequently paid with
$2
bills, and as a result, the notes often were used at USO clubs, post exchanges, commissaries, and canteens.[12]
Many people believe that the 1976 series $two notation with its unusual contrary pattern was a special, limited issue produced for the United States Bicentennial; this, combined with the before discontinuation of the denomination, gave the impression these notes might be valuable every bit collector’southward items, and contributed to hoarding. Today, the general public is yet largely unfamiliar with the notes because they are non widely circulated and go along to exist hoarded.[13]

The common misconception that the
$ii
note is no longer being produced also remains,[14]
though
$2
notes have been printed since 1862, except for a 10-twelvemonth hiatus between 1966 and 1976. The U.S. Treasury reports that
$1,549,052,714
worth of
$2
bills were in apportionment worldwide equally of Apr 30, 2007.[14]

Unusual serial numbers (example: A11111111A) and replacement notes (known by collectors as “star notes” and designated past a star in the serial number) can raise the collector value of some bills. “Collectible” or “enhanced” two-dollar bills, commemorating America’s national parks and other places, people, and events, have been fabricated and sold by coin dealers and others in contempo years merely by adding color, special graphics or color printed plastic overlays onto regular-effect $2 notes past using computer printers. The creators and marketers of many of these notes unscrupulously imply that they are authorized or issued by the federal government; however, no “collectible” or “enhanced” two-dollar bills accept been authorized by the The states Treasury, the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, nor whatever other authorities agency and the bills have no value in a higher place their
$ii
face up on the collectors’ market.[15]

Certain conventions and tourism/convention bureaus capitalize on the scarcity of
$2
notes in circulation, encouraging convention attendees and tourists to spend the bills to illustrate to the host communities the economic bear upon that the conventions and tourism bring. Sometimes known as “SpendTom” campaigns, the
$2
bills linger in the customs as a constant reminder. Some campaigns encourage people to participate in a hunt for the bills to win prizes.[16]

History

[edit]

Big-sized notes

[edit]

(approximately

7.4218 in × 3.125 in



189 mm × 79 mm
)

In March 1862, the beginning $two bill was issued as a Legal Tender Notation (The states Notation) with a portrait of Alexander Hamilton; the portrait of Hamilton used was a profile view, different from the familiar portrait in utilise on the small-sized $10 bill since 1928.

By 1869, the $ii Usa Note was redesigned with the now-familiar portrait of Thomas Jefferson to the left and a vignette of the The states Capitol in the center of the obverse. This note also featured dark-green tinting on the height and left side of the obverse. Although this note is technically a U.s. Note,

TREASURY NOTE

appeared on information technology instead of

UNITED STATES NOTE
. The reverse was completely redesigned. This series was again revised in 1874; changes on the obverse included removing the green tinting, adding a carmine floral blueprint around

WASHINGTON D.C.
, and changing the term

TREASURY Note

to

Us Notation
. The 1874 design was besides issued every bit Serial of 1875 and 1878, and past 1880, the cerise floral design around

WASHINGTON D.C.

on the U.s.a. Note was removed and the serial numbers were changed to blue. This note with the red floral pattern was also issued as Serial of 1917 but with cherry-red serial numbers by that fourth dimension.[17]

National Bank Notes were issued in 1875 and feature a woman unfurling a flag and a large sideways ‘2’ (“Lazy Duce”) on the obverse. The reverse has the rex of England smoking tobacco and an eagle with a shield.[18]
In 1886, the offset $2 argent document with a portrait of The states Civil War General Winfield Scott Hancock on the left of the obverse was issued. This design continued until 1891 when a new $2 Silver Certificate was issued with a portrait of U.S. Treasury Secretarial assistant William Windom in the eye of the obverse.[xix]
Two-dollar Treasury, or “Coin”, Notes were offset issued for regime purchases of silver bullion in 1890 from the silver mining industry. The contrary featured large diction of

TWO

in the centre and a numeral ii to the right surrounded by an ornate design that occupied about the entire note. In 1891, the opposite of the Series of 1890 Treasury Note was redesigned because the treasury felt that information technology was besides “busy”, making it as well easy to apocryphal. More open space was incorporated into the new design.[20]

In 1896, the “Educational Series” Silver Certificate was issued. The entire obverse of the notation was covered in artwork with an allegorical effigy of science presenting steam and electricity to commerce and manufacture. The reverse of the note featured portraits of Robert Fulton and Samuel F. B. Morse surrounded past an ornate pattern that occupied almost the entire note. By 1899, notwithstanding, The $two Argent Certificate was redesigned with a small portrait of George Washington surrounded past allegorical figures representing agriculture and mechanics.[21]
Large-sized Federal Reserve Bank Notes were issued in 1918. Each note was an obligation of the issuing Federal Reserve Bank and could only be redeemed at the respective banking company. The obverse of the notation featured a borderless portrait of Thomas Jefferson to left and wording in the entire center. The opposite featured a World War I battleship.[22]

Small size notes

[edit]

(
6.xiv in × 2.61 in



156 mm × 66 mm
)


1928–1966

[edit]

In 1928, when all U.S. currency was changed to its current size, the
$2
bill was issued only as a The states Note. The obverse featured a cropped version of Thomas Jefferson’south portrait that had been on previous
$2
bills. The reverse featured Jefferson’south home, Monticello. Every bit with all United States Notes the treasury seal and series numbers were red. The Serial of 1928
$2
bill featured the treasury seal superimposed by the The states Note obligation to the left and a large gray

Two

to the correct.[23]

During the 1950s, production of
$2
bills began to decrease. The relative scarcity of the notes led some to start saving whatsoever they received, with the inevitable result that the bills became less common in circulation.[
citation needed
]

In 1953, the
$2
neb, along with the
$v
U.s. Note, received small-scale design changes. The treasury seal was made smaller and moved to the right side of the bill; it was superimposed over the gray word

Ii
. The United states Note obligation at present became superimposed over a gray numeral two. The reverse remained unchanged.[24]

The final change to
$two
Us Notes came in 1963 (as Series 1963) when the motto

IN GOD We TRUST

was added to the opposite over the Monticello.[25]
Further, considering silver certificates were soon to be no longer redeemable in argent,

Volition PAY TO THE BEARER ON Demand

was removed from the obverse. In August 1966 (1966-09), the
$2
and
$5
denominations of United states Notes were officially discontinued, though they both remain legal tender.


1976–current

[edit]

Serial 1976 first day of issue
$two
note with a canceled JFK postage stamp stamp.

On Nov 3, 1975, Secretary of the Treasury William E. Simon appear the reissuance of the
$2
note equally a cost-saving measure; the new
$2
notes would be available from banks on April xiii, 1976 (1976-04-13), Thomas Jefferson’s altogether.[26]
Series 1976
$2
bills were partially redesigned and reissued as a Federal Reserve Note. The annotation retains the same portrait of Jefferson, and the bones design of the obverse remains unchanged since 1928. The treasury seal and serial numbers are printed in greenish ink, replacing the red used on the previous United States Note. Since the reintroduction of the annotation coincided with the United States Bicentennial, it was decided to use a bicentennial-themed design on the reverse. The bill was not issued specifically to gloat the bicenntenial, as is widely causeless. An engraved rendition (not an exact reproduction) of John Trumbull’southward
Declaration of Independence
replaced Monticello on the reverse. First-day problems of the new
$ii
bills could be taken to a post role and stamped with the engagement “Apr xiii 1976”. The BEP produced a total of 590,720,000 notes from Series 1976, the last run printed in 1978.

Currently, stamped Series 1976
$2
notes typically trade for about twice their face value. If the bills were stamped in a metropolis with an unusual name, the value may exist slightly higher. However, no first-day-issued 1976
$two
bills with postage stamp stamps are peculiarly rare or valuable.

Despite their age, well-baked, uncirculated Series 1976
$two
notes are non uncommon and are non particularly valuable. More than half a billion serial 1976
$2
notes were printed and a very large number were saved and hoarded upon their original issue. A typical, single uncirculated 1976
$2
pecker is worth just slightly above
$ii
face value. An average circulated Serial 1976 note has no additional value to a higher place its
$2
face.

In 1996 and 1997, 153,600,000 bills were printed[27]
as Series 1995 for the Federal Reserve District of Atlanta. Beginning with Series 1995, all
$2
notes have been produced at the Western Currency Facility in Fort Worth, Texas. In 2004, 121,600,000 of the Series 2003 bills were printed for the Federal Reserve Commune of Minneapolis. An outcome of Serial 2003A
$2
bills was printed from July to September 2006 for all twelve Federal Reserve Banks. In all, 220,800,000 notes were printed.[28]

In February 2012, the BEP printed 512,000 Series 2009
$2
Star Notes, in anticipation of more regular runs being printed later in 2012. Serial 2009
$2
bills were issued to banks during the autumn of 2012.[29]
[30]

In November 2013, the BEP began printing Series 2013
$ii
notes for the Federal Reserve Banking concern of Atlanta; these notes entered circulation in early 2014. A total of 44,800,000 notes were ordered for financial year 2014, which ran from Oct 2013 through September 2014.[31]
Series 2017A
$2
notes were start issued to banks in December 2019.

Series dates

[edit]

Large size

[edit]

Series 1880 $2 Legal Tender note showing a big brown treasury seal. The signatures of Blanche Bruce & A. U. Wyman are nowadays on the obverse near the bottom.

Type Serial Annalsα Treasurerα Sealα Notes
Legal Tender Annotation 1862 Lucius E. Chittenden F. E. Spinner Small Blood-red w/rays Also called a “Greenback”.
Legal Tender Note 1869 John Allison F. E. Spinner Large Red Nicknamed: “Rainbow Note” from its
ruddy, white, and blueish colors.[32]
Legal Tender Annotation 1874 John Allison F. E. Spinner Modest Cherry-red w/rays
Legal Tender Note 1875 John Allison New & Wyman Small Carmine w/rays
Legal Tender Notation 1878 Allison & Scofield James Gilfillan Small Blood-red west/rays Scofield/Gilfillan combo is scarce
Legal Tender Annotation 1880 Scofield, Bruce,
Rosecrans, and Tillman
Gilfillan, Wyman, Huston,
Nebeker, and Morgan
Large Brown/Red
Small Carmine scalloped
Legal Tender Notation 1917 Teehee, Elliott,
and Speelman
John Burke & White Small Red scalloped
National Bank Note Original Colby, Jeffries, and Allison F. E. Spinner Small Ruby-red west/rays Jeffries/Spinner philharmonic is very rare
National Bank Note 1875 Allison & Scofield New, Wyman, and Gilfillan Pocket-sized Red scalloped Nicknamed: “Lazy Deuce” along with
the original series from the position
of the “ii” on the note.[33]
Silver Document 1886 William S. Rosecrans Hashemite kingdom of jordan, Hyatt, and Huston Large Brown/Red
Small Carmine scalloped
Silver Certificate 1891 William S. Rosecrans Benjamin Harrison Big Red
Silver Certificate 1891 Rosecrans & Tillman Nebecker & Morgan Small Carmine scalloped
Silverish Certificate 1896 Tillman & Bruce Morgan & Roberts Modest Cerise due west/rays Role of the “Educational Series”.
Silver Certificate 1899 Lyons, Vernon, Napier,
Parker, Teehee, Elliott,
and Speelman
Roberts, Treat, McClung,
Thompson, Burke, and White
Blueish
Treasury Note 1890 William S. Rosecrans Huston & Nebecker Large Chocolate-brown

& Small Red scalloped
Treasury Note 1890 William Southward. Rosecrans Benjamin Harrison Large Blood-red
Treasury Note 1891 Rosecrans, Tillman, and Bruce Nebecker, Morgan, and Roberts Small Blood-red scalloped
Federal Reserve Bank Annotation 1918 Teehee & Elliott John Burke Blue Nicknamed: “Battleship note” from
the reverse pattern.[34]

Pocket-sized size

[edit]

Blazon Series Treasurerα Secretaryα Seal year(south) of issue
Legal Tender Note 1928 Tate Mellon Red
Legal Tender Annotation 1928A Woods Mellon Red
Legal Tender Note 1928B Woods Mills Ruddy
Legal Tender Notation 1928C Julian Morgenthau Red erstwhile in 1934-1945
Legal Tender Notation 1928D Julian Morgenthau Red one-time in 1934-1945
Legal Tender Notation 1928E Julian Vinson Red
Legal Tender Annotation 1928F Julian Snyder Reddish
Legal Tender Note 1928G Clark Snyder Red
Legal Tender Note 1953 Priest Humphrey Ruby-red
Legal Tender Annotation 1953A Priest Anderson Ruby
Legal Tender Note 1953B Smith Dillon Crimson
Legal Tender Annotation 1953C Granahan Dillon Cherry-red
Legal Tender Annotation 1963 Granahan Dillon Red
Legal Tender Note 1963A Granahan Fowler Crimson
Federal Reserve Notation 1976 Neff Simon Green
Federal Reserve Note 1995 Withrow Rubin Dark-green
Federal Reserve Note 2003 Marin Snowfall Dark-green
Federal Reserve Note 2003A Cabral Snow Green
Federal Reserve Annotation 2009 Rios Geithner Green
Federal Reserve Note 2013 Rios Lew Green
Federal Reserve Note 2017A Carranza Mnuchin Greenish



These are sourced past The Official Ruby-red Book (Whitman).[35]

Visual chronology

[edit]

A chronological brandish of the American two-dollar pecker.

The design of ii-dollar bill throughout the history of the The states.

Usage

[edit]

A series 1976 $ii beak, heavily yellowed and worn from over 4 decades of circulation and apply.

Because $2 bills are uncommon in daily apply, their use tin can make a particular grouping of spenders visible. A documented case of using two-dollar bills to send a message to a community is the case of Geneva Steel and the communities in the surrounding Utah County. In 1989, Geneva Steel paid its employee bonuses in $2 bills. When the bills began to appear in unlike places, people recognized the importance of the visitor to the local economy.[36]

Use of the $ii bill is likewise being suggested past some gun rights activists to show support for Second Amendment rights, peculiarly at stores that permit open up carry or concealed carry of weapons on their premises.[37]
Two-dollar notes have also seen increased usage in situations where tipping is encouraged, especially in gentlemen’due south clubs. This is due to the idea that tips will increase considering of the ease of use of a single, higher-denomination bill as the lowest common note in apply.[38]

The use of the $2 bill is popular amid fans and alumni of Clemson University, who often bring notes with them when traveling to university athletic events in other localities as a demonstration of their economic bear on in an expanse. The idea was get-go popularized in 1977 when Georgia Tech had threatened to no longer play the Tigers in football and has since caught on as a token of fandom when traveling to other locations. Fans will ofttimes postage an orange tiger hand (Clemson’s logo) on the note as a sign of its origin.[39]

During the 1930s, the $2 bill was ofttimes used at East Declension equus caballus race tracks to make a bet. Because of the German and Jewish influence, the bill was locally known in parts of New Bailiwick of jersey as a “zwei-buck”, and the upper right corner “ii” was sometimes torn off to increase the luck.[
citation needed
]

As of October 2013,[xl]
MetroBuses in Greater St. Louis do not take $2 bills.[41]

In contempo years, some individuals have become ‘ambassadors’ for the 2-dollar bill in an endeavor to popularize its use in everyday transactions by using them as often equally possible, adding large numbers of the notes into circulation in the process.[42]
[43]

Incidents

[edit]

The relative scarcity of the $2 bill in everyday circulation has led to confusion at points of sale, every bit well as overreaction past merchants and fifty-fifty attempted prosecution of the individual trying to tender the pecker.

In 2005, a man in Baltimore, Maryland, was jailed for attempting to utilize $ii bills that the store and local police incorrectly idea were counterfeit because of smeared ink on some of the bills.[44]

In 2016, a thirteen-year-former girl in Texas was detained by law for attempting to apply a $2 bill to pay for tiffin in her school’s cafeteria. The bill, a series 1953 ruby seal, while still legal tender, was onetime enough that the school’s counterfeit pen would not work on it,[45]
equally the chemical properties of the paper used for U.s.a. currency prior to 1960 are such that a counterfeit pen is unable to prove whether or non the bill is genuine.[46]

Uncut currency sheets

[edit]

Uncut 32-bailiwick sheet of series 1995
$2
Federal Reserve Notes.

Alongside other denominations, uncut currency sheets of
$2
bills are available from the Bureau of Engraving and Press. Some of the contempo
$2
uncut sheets from Series 1995 and Series 2003 have been collectibles as they come up from special non-circulation printings. Most of the Series 1995
$2
uncut sheets had a higher suffix letter in the serial number than regular circulation
$ii
bills.[
original inquiry?
]

In late 1999, to celebrate the new millennium, a unique run of 9,999 Series 1995
$ii
star notes were printed for all twelve Federal Reserve Banks; the initial press of Series 1995
$2
notes for circulation was for the Atlanta district (F) just. Uncut
$two
sheets from Serial 2003 were printed for the Boston (A), New York (B), Atlanta (F), Chicago (M), Minneapolis (I), and Dallas (K) Federal Reserve districts; notes from the Minneapolis district were the but ones released for apportionment. Uncut sheets of Series 2003A have also been produced, although in this instance circulating currency for all twelve districts has besides been made. All
$2
notes beginning with Serial 1995 have been printed in the BEP facility in Fort Worth, Texas, (indicated by “FW” preceding the face plate number on the obverse of the note).[28]
[47]
[48]
Uncut sheets of
$2
bills are available in various sizes. A 32-subject canvass, which is the original-size sail on which the notes are printed, is available. Other sheet sizes available have been cut from the original 32-subject sail. These include half (sixteen-note), quarter (8-note), and eighth (four-note) sheets for
$2
bills. Uncut sheets are sold for more than than their corresponding face values.[49]
Uncut sheets of large size notes (issued before 1928) also exist, but are extremely rare.[fifty]

See also

[edit]

  • Japanese 2000 yen banknote – another banknote denomination of roughly ten times the value that is similarly rarely seen in circulation and likewise available upon asking from banks.

References

[edit]

Citations

  1. ^


    “Currency Facts”.
    uscurrency.gov. U.S. Currency Educational activity Plan. Retrieved
    July xv,
    2020
    .



  2. ^


    “$2 Note | U.South. Currency Education Program”.


  3. ^


    Paulas, Rick. “The Mystery of $2 Bills”.
    Pacific Standard
    . Retrieved
    July xiv,
    2019
    .



  4. ^


    “Legal Tender Alexander Hamilton: 1862 $2 Currency”. The Kennedy Mint. Retrieved
    Feb 9,
    2011
    .



  5. ^


    “Nigh Paper Money – Pocket-size-size Bicentennial $2 notes”. Coinworld.com. Archived from the original on February seven, 2011. Retrieved
    February 9,
    2011
    .



  6. ^

    1634–1699:
    McCusker, J. J. (1997).
    How Much Is That in Existent Money? A Historical Price Index for Apply as a Deflator of Coin Values in the Economic system of the Usa: Addenda et Corrigenda
    (PDF). American Antiquarian Society.


    1700–1799:
    McCusker, J. J. (1992).
    How Much Is That in Real Coin? A Historical Price Index for Utilize as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economic system of the United States
    (PDF). American Antique Guild.


    1800–nowadays:
    Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. “Consumer Cost Index (estimate) 1800–”. Retrieved
    April xvi,
    2022
    .



  7. ^


    Stone, Suzanne J. (March–April 1976). “The $2 Beak Returns”
    (PDF).
    The Economic Review. Federal Reserve Depository financial institution of Richmond.
    62
    (2). Retrieved
    December 21,
    2014
    .



  8. ^


    “$two.00 notwithstanding printed?”. Ustreas.gov. Archived from the original on July 25, 2010. Retrieved
    July 27,
    2010
    .



  9. ^


    “$2 accepting vending machines”. 4mega-vending.com. Archived from the original on July v, 2002. Retrieved
    February 9,
    2011
    .



  10. ^


    “Use The $two”. Retrieved
    December 22,
    2019
    .



  11. ^


    “FAQ – How much does it price to produce currency and coin?”.
    Lath of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
    . Retrieved
    March 25,
    2020
    .



  12. ^


    Why $two bills are thought to exist bad luck – prune from The Two Dollar Bill Documentary
    on YouTube.

  13. ^


    Andres, Tommy (January 9, 2015). “Why are at that place so few $ii bills?”.
    Market place. Minnesota Public Radio. Retrieved
    Apr vi,
    2021
    .


  14. ^


    a




    b




    “FAQs: Denominations of currency”. United States Section of the Treasury. Retrieved
    August 25,
    2014
    .



  15. ^


    bbbconsumeralert (Jan 27, 2010). “Sometimes a $two Bill is Just a $2 Bill”. Tucson Citizen.com. Retrieved
    February 9,
    2011
    .



  16. ^


    “Spend Tom 2010”. Visit California. January 1, 2010. Retrieved
    February 17,
    2014
    .



  17. ^

    Friedberg & Friedberg 2014, pp. 88–ninety.

  18. ^

    Friedberg & Friedberg 2014, p. 91.

  19. ^

    Friedberg & Friedberg 2014, pp. 91–92.

  20. ^

    Friedberg & Friedberg 2014, pp. 95–96.

  21. ^

    Friedberg & Friedberg 2014, p. 93–94.

  22. ^

    Friedberg & Friedberg 2014, p. 96–97.

  23. ^

    Friedberg & Friedberg 2014, p. 97.

  24. ^

    Friedberg & Friedberg 2014, p. 98.

  25. ^

    Friedberg & Friedberg 2014, p. 99.

  26. ^


    Stone, Suzanne J. (March–April 1976). “The $ii Neb Returns”. Retrieved
    February 9,
    2011
    .



  27. ^


    Agency of Engraving and Press. “Annual Production Figures”. Archived from the original on March 4, 2007. Retrieved
    Apr 14,
    2007
    .


  28. ^


    a




    b




    “Serial 2003A $ii”. USpapermoney.info. Retrieved
    February 9,
    2011
    .



  29. ^


    “Series 2009 $ii”. USpapermoney.info. Retrieved
    April 29,
    2012
    .



  30. ^


    “2012 BEP Production Info via FOIA”. WheresGeorge.com. Retrieved
    April 29,
    2012
    .



  31. ^


    “Serial 2013 $2”. USpapermoney.info. Retrieved
    Feb 19,
    2014
    .



  32. ^


    “1869 $2 Legal Tender Rainbow Notation”. usrarecurrency.com. Retrieved
    November 14,
    2015
    .



  33. ^


    Lawrence, Kathy (May 19, 2011). ““Lazy Deuces” — $ii National Bank Notes”. currency.ha.com. Retrieved
    Nov 14,
    2015
    .



  34. ^


    Reed, Fred (July 29, 2009). “Battleship Note Projects American Naval Force”. numismaster.com. Retrieved
    November 14,
    2015
    .



  35. ^

    Friedberg & Friedberg 2014, pp. 56–68.

  36. ^


    Walch, Tad (May 17, 2003). “Geneva workers give their $2 worth”. Deseret News. Retrieved
    May 30,
    2013
    .



  37. ^


    “2A supporters start Buycott to boxing the Starbucks Anti-Firearm Boycott”. Armed forces Times. February fourteen, 2012. Retrieved
    February 15,
    2012
    .



  38. ^


    “$2 neb increasing in use and shedding its ‘play-money’ image”.
    U.s. Today. November seven, 2006. Retrieved
    February 17,
    2011
    .



  39. ^


    “Clemson Academy Traditions”. Retrieved
    Oct 3,
    2016
    .



  40. ^


    “Edifice a Better Transit Experience: Metro Installing New Fareboxes on Entire MetroBus Armada”.
    Metrostlouis.org Site. August 29, 2013. Retrieved
    September 23,
    2020
    .



  41. ^


    Frankel, Todd. “Bus fare is $2, just you can’t utilise a $two bill”.
    STLtoday.com
    . Retrieved
    September 23,
    2020
    .



  42. ^


    Moore, Chadwick (April 2, 2014). “Two Dollar Nib Is Oddity, but Some Love the Tender”.
    The New York Times
    . Retrieved
    July 14,
    2019
    .



  43. ^


    Dunau, Bera (Baronial 23, 2019). “‘They just call me the $2 bill guy’: Teen boosts uncommon currency”.
    Daily Hampshire Gazette. Archived from the original on Baronial fifteen, 2020. Retrieved
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    Olesker, Michael (March eight, 2005). “A tale of client service, justice and currency equally funny equally a $2 pecker”.
    The Baltimore Sun. Archived from the original on May 6, 2019. Retrieved
    September 17,
    2018
    .



  45. ^


    “Lunchroom Lunacy: ISD cops investigate $2 bill spent on schoolhouse lunch”. abc13.com. Apr 29, 2016. Retrieved
    February 27,
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    .



  46. ^


    “Old Newspaper Money and Counterfeit-Detecting Pens”. The East-Sylum. Retrieved
    July 15,
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    .



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    “Series 1995 $2”. USpapermoney.info. Retrieved
    February 9,
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    .



  48. ^


    “Series 2003 $2”. USpapermoney.info. Retrieved
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    .



  49. ^


    “BEP to Raise Uncut Currency Sail Prices”.
    coinnews.net. July 21, 2011. Retrieved
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  50. ^


    “Large Size. 1896. Silver Certificates. Leap Presentation Set of the First Educational Uncut Sheets. $1, $two, and $5. Fr-224, 247, and 268. PMG Photo Proof Certificates”.
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General

  • Standard Catalog of United States Paper Money. Krause Publications.

  • Friedberg, Arthur L.; Friedberg, Ira S. (2014) [2005].
    A Guide Book of The states Paper Money: Complete Source for History, Grading, and Values. Whitman Publishing, LLC. ISBN978-0-7948-2362-seven.

  • The Bureau of Engraving and Printing website Archived May 30, 1997, at the Wayback Machine
  • USpapermoney.info

External links

[edit]

  • $two Notes, U.Southward. Currency Pedagogy
  • The U.S. Bureau of Engraving and Press’s website Archived May 30, 1997, at the Wayback Auto
  • The Two Dollar Bill project teaches Americans virtually the history of the $2 beak Archived July four, 2012, at the Wayback Machine



Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_two-dollar_bill

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