Two Dollar Battleship note Help
FunwithMPL
Posts: 328 ✭✭✭
I'm Working on an exhibit showing my battleship note.
What does May 18, 1914 stand for on the note?
Also why is just a small letter like a C in the lower left side of the note and the same letter C but with a number on the upper right side of the note.
Thanks for the help.
Carl
What does May 18, 1914 stand for on the note?
Also why is just a small letter like a C in the lower left side of the note and the same letter C but with a number on the upper right side of the note.
Thanks for the help.
Carl
Collector
0
Comments
The large letters with the number reflects the specific FR bank or district, A 1 for Boston to L 12 for San Francisco (H 8 is STL). The small letter indicates the plate position that printed the specific note. "C" would be the 3rd position from the top of the 4 position printing plate, just like most NBNs.
edited to add: here's some info about the start of the Minneapolis FR Bank with dates about enabling legislation, organization, when it opened, etc. I think similar info is probably available for the other 11 banks if you google something like Federal Reserve and history, etc. I vaguely recall that not all FRBNs had the same date but don't have my library handy to verify.
https://www.minneapol............is
Here's the Chicago info too:
https://www.chicagofe............7-1914
And a great little book produced on the 75th anniversary of the STL fed.
https://www.stlouisfed.o.........Conclusion.pdf
edited to add part 2. FWIW and being personally a bit too compulsive, I scanned eBay offerings of large FRBNs and found that San Francisco carries a May 20, 1914 date. All the others I looked at had the May 18th date.
Might add that the battleship on the $2 FRBN on the reverse is the USS Texas BB35 (2 anchors each side) , and not the USS New York BB34 (1 anchor each side) as generally assumed.
The Texas is presently in a harbour near Houston, the New York is at the bottum of the sea near Hawaii.
Something about ships just looks good on notes, I think.
A Texas named battleship on a Texas district note makes sense imho.
a (lone) star replacement Texas note would be even cooler, although very expensive
I have been collecting paper money since 1969. I was always told that the Battleship was the New York. You learn something every day.
It is the New York *class* of ship. There were two ships in that class, BB New York, and BB Texas. But Andre has identified which one of the class is actually on the note.
from the other side and shows again 2 anchors.
its difficult to find pictures from both ships on both sides in their Original 1914 configurarion, both were drasticly changed overtime, the Texas has lost the second anchors a long time ago.
the engraving on the $2 banknote is a mirrored pic , never thought about that.
End conclusion , the battleships on the banknotes are from an USS BB class battleship in general.
Clear pictures of both sides of both ships (polish website)
http://smartagepl.tumblr.com/post/146888431459/tuz-przed-wybuchem-i-wojny-swiatowej-najwieksze
B for New York
Fr. 751 1918 $2 NY BATTLESHIP B8678196A FRBN PCGS 60
All 12 districts from Boston to San Francisco show the same Battleship with 2 anchors .
the confusion starts because its a mirror image of the portside of both ships.
i always liked them battleship notes. there neat looking