20 dollar bill serial number 06211211
It was signed by the Treasurer of the United States Ivy Baker Priest and the Secretary of the Treasury G M Humphrey.
20 DOLLAR BILL SERIAL NUMBER 06211211 SERIES
The 1950A series $20 FRN was printed August 1953 through August 1957 and there were 487,472,000 regular notes printed along side 28,264,000 star replacement notes. Below the White House is written TWENTY DOLLARS. On the reserve side of the 1950 20 dollar bill is a picture of the White House with the words THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA above it.
20 DOLLAR BILL SERIAL NUMBER 06211211 SERIAL NUMBER
Underneath this is the serial number printed again.Īt the bottom left hand side is the signature of the Treasurer of the United States who at the time was Georgia Neese Clark. This note was printed was Philadelphia which is denoted by the letter 'C'.
To the left of Andrew Jackson's portrait is the a paragraph reading, 'This note is legal tender for all debts, public and private, and is redeemable in lawful money at the United States Treasury, or at any Federal Reserve bank.'īelow this paragraph is the Federal Reserve bank the note was issued for. Underneath the seal is the series, which in this case is 1950, and the signature of the Secretary of the Treasury John Wesley Snyder. This particular 20 dollar FRN is a star replacement note as it contains a star after the serial number.īelow the serial number is the green seal of the Department of the Treasury with the letters TWENTY written over the top. To the right of the Jackson portrait is the serial number G00309280*. Twenty dollar bill's prior to 1928 were large sized notes and had an image of Grover Cleveland on the obverse who was then subsequently moved to the $1000 bill. In the center of the obverse of the small sized $20 bill is an image of Andrew Jackson who has been featured on the $20 Federal Reserve Note since 1928. Regular Star Notes Printed: 95,000,000 What Does The 1950 20 Dollar Bill Look Like?.Louis (H), Minneapolis (I), Kansas City (J), Dallas (K), San Francisco (L)
“Unc or UNC” banknotes – uncirculated or also called Crisp Uncirculated (CU) are notes in new condition with no wear, no fold marks, and have SHARP corners. Notes of lower quality (Fair to Fine) bring lower prices of course, as their condition generally plays a large role in the overall appraisal. These notes contain aspects such as limited folds, semi crisp to crisp surface, no tears, and no water damage or environmental damage. $20 Bill Values – How Are They Graded? Average circulated notes grade between Very Fine (VF) and Extremely Fine (EF).