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Learn about the history, design, and features of the $50 bill, the lowest circulated U.S. denomination. See images of different types and series of $50 notes, from large size to small size, from interest bearing to gold certificates.
Fifty-dollar bills have the second-lowest circulation after the $2 bill. A guide that accompanied the Old Money Prices blog offered values on $50 bills from 1862 to 1923. Certain 1923 bills ...
Learn which presidents have appeared on U.S. banknotes, coins, and commemorative pieces, and when and how they were issued. See the list of presidents by order of service, from George Washington to Barack Obama.
A famous riddle that involves an informal fallacy and a misleading sum. The riddle is solved by realizing that the sum of the money in the guests' pockets and the bellhop's pocket is $30, not $29.
The fifty-dollar denomination was struck by private minters such as Kellogg and Co. The private $50 pieces were round in form, but those struck by Augustus Humbert for the U.S. Assay Office at San Francisco, prior to the establishment of the San Francisco Mint in 1854, were octagonal. Humbert's pieces were not money in a legal sense, as ...
For example, $73 is written as “seventy-three,” and the words for $43.50 are “Forty-three and 50/100.” You don’t need to write the word “dollars” if your bank has preprinted it on ...
Learn about the 53 individuals who are depicted on U.S. banknotes, including presidents, cabinet members, Founding Fathers, and military leaders. See their portraits, titles, positions, and dates of appearance on different note types and denominations.
The fifty dollar bill may refer to banknotes of currencies that are named dollar. Note that some of these currencies may have coins for 50 dollars instead. Australian fifty-dollar note; Canadian fifty-dollar bill; Hong Kong fifty-dollar note; New Zealand fifty-dollar note; United States fifty-dollar bill