$1 Note Engraving & Printing

By A Mystery Man Writer

  The first $1 Federal Reserve notes were issued in 1963.  The design, featuring George Washington on the face and the Great Seal on the back, has not changed. The first $1 notes (called United States Notes or "Legal Tenders") were issued by the federal government in 1862 and featured a portrait of Secretary of the Treasury Salmon P. Chase (1861-1864). The first use of George Washington's portrait on the $1 note was on Series 1869 United States Notes. If you had 10 billion $1 notes and spent one every second of every day, it would require 317 years for you to go broke. Because the $1 note is infrequently counterfeited, the government has no plans to redesign this note.  In addition, there is a recurring provision in Section 116 of the annual Financial Services and General Government Appropriations Act that prohibits the redesign of the $1 note. All U.S. currency remains legal tender, regardless of when it was issued.

In God We Trust $1 Notes : Secretary of the Treasury Press Releases : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive

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Treasury Note (1890–1891) - Wikipedia

1 Dollar 1988 - E, 1988 Issue - 1 Dollar - United States of America - Banknote - 4413, 1 Dollar

Scenes of Canada Series $1 Note - Bank of Canada Museum

Bureau Of Engraving And Printing

File:Obverse of the Series 2013 $1 Federal Reserve Note.jpg - Wikimedia Commons

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