Hi all,
I've got an old one hundred dollar bill from 1934, "series of 1934 A".
It's probably not worth anything more than it's face value (from what
I've read in this group, I see they're still very common) but I still
have
a question to all the collectors out there.
It's in bad shape, it has apparently circulated a lot (but not a lot
in
these last 50 years as I found it at my old aunt's place and nothing
there really moved these last 50 years ;)
Very bad photograph here (taken with my MacBook's internal camera :) :
http://users.skynet.be/fa287483/usdBill1.jpg
and here too:
http://users.skynet.be/fa287483/usdBill2.jpg
Are bills like this one in the U.S. always worth at least their face
value?
Can I pay with that 1934 bill in a shop ?
And will they ever be worth at least their face value? By that, I
mean, will
I always be able to trade this $100 bill from 1934 for a more recent
bill?
(I ask because here, in Europe, we're now all using Euros and our
'old'
bills, from the various local countries, were only 'valid' up to some
point.
In my country I think I could still change old bills by going to the
'national bank' but that's it : they're not accepted anywhere else).
I also found quite some $100 bills from 1950 (some plain 'series
1950',
some 'series 1950 B', some C's and some D's). I'm going to the U.S.
now.
If I don't need the money, is there any point in changing them to
newer $100 bills or can I keep them for ever in a safe, knowing that
they'll always be worth at least $100 ?
I mean, without taking into the fact that I could put this on an
account
and earn interest ;)
Also on the Wikipedia article on the one hundred dollar bill here :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_one_hundred-dollar_bill
It says that the 'spikes' where added to the Federal Reserve seal in
1950.
However my bill states 'SERIES OF 1934 A' (hard to read on my bad
photograph but it's 1934) and the green seal has 'spikes' apparently.
Slight error on Wikipedia ?
Thanks in advance for your answers,
Alex


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