Small-sized note



         


A large-sized note is a bill of any denomination of U.S. currency printed between 1863 and 1929. This is in contrast with small-sized notes, which were printed starting in 1928. Large-sized notes exist in denominations of $1 through $10000. The most common large-sized notes are the Federal Reserve Notes of Series 1914 and 1918. These are detailed below, but are only a subset of all large-sized notes made by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing.

<tr><th>Denomination<th>Portrait<th>Nickname<th>Design on back <tr><td>$5<td>Abraham Lincoln<td>Fin <tr><td>$10<td>Andrew Jackson<td>Sawbuck <tr><td>$20<td>Grover Cleveland<td>Double sawbuck<td>Steam locomotive, Steamship <tr><td>$50<td>Ulysses Grant<td>Half C-note <tr><td>$100<td>Benjamin Franklin<td>C-note <tr><td>$500<td>John Marshall <tr><td>$1000<td>Alexander Hamilton <tr><td>$5000<td>James Madison <tr><td>$10,000<td>Salmon Chase </table>


A large-sized note can also refer to a large-denomination banknote in various currencies.






  View Live Article   This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License