Collector of numeral seals.That's the 1928 and 1928A series of FRNs with a number rather than a letter in the district seal. Owner/operator of Bottom Line Currency
I'm a low numbers guy, so while 1B is impressive, I'd venture that 1A would be the first note in the series, so I'm going to have to pass. Nice note, though....
This is a variation of the post that goes like this:
Step one: someone posts a note that was available at auction and sold for pennies on the dollar.
Step two: everyone else kicks themselves for not seeing it and getting the same deal (although, in truth, had one more person realized its value the note would sell closer to market)
Step three: forum members yell "you suck" which indicates someone got a sensational deal
Step four: nobody notices that the OP (original poster) posted on April 1. There never was an auction or sale. They all fell for the April Fools Day joke.
That is correct - according to the Murray reference, the $20 Legal Tender stars started with *1B so, at least, the April Fools joke used the first valid serial number.
Comments
That would be a rip though.
there is no 1A I believe... large size notes didnt always follow the A-B-C... Z pattern
this note (if real? maybe it is) would be one of the most fantastic $500,000 notes out there
Step one: someone posts a note that was available at auction and sold for pennies on the dollar.
Step two: everyone else kicks themselves for not seeing it and getting the same deal (although, in truth, had one more person realized its value the note would sell closer to market)
Step three: forum members yell "you suck" which indicates someone got a sensational deal
Step four: nobody notices that the OP (original poster) posted on April 1. There never was an auction or sale. They all fell for the April Fools Day joke.
That is correct - according to the Murray reference, the $20 Legal Tender stars started with *1B so, at least, the April Fools joke used the first valid serial number.
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