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1 000 000 Dollars U.S. Millennium Note

Issuer United States
Year 2000
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Size 156 x 66 mm
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Obverse description Central oval vignette of the Statue of Liberty set within a laurel wreath, flanked by a circular "Right to Bear Arms" seal to the left and a green "MILLION" underprint with eagle vignette to the right. The border carries intricate guilloche scrollwork with denomination numerals at all corners, and facsimile signatures of G. Washington and A. Hamilton appear below the central vignette.
Obverse lettering U.S. MILLENNIUM NOTE
ONE NATION
UNDER GOD
THIS NON-NEGOTIABLE NOTE
CELEBRATES THE FREEDOM AND
PROSPERTY TO WHICH ALL AMERICANS
MAY ASPIRE
*THE RIGHT TO BEAR ARMS
1999 A. ROSS
AMERICANA ONE
LIBERTY
THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
ONE MILLION DOLLARS
SERIES OF 2000 B
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Comments

This is a novelty item, not a banknote. The United States has never issued a one-million-dollar denomination; the highest denomination ever released for general circulation was the $10,000 Federal Reserve Note, last printed in 1945. Notes of this type were produced commercially around the millennium as souvenirs, with no legal tender status and no issuing authority behind them — the Treasury and Federal Reserve had no involvement whatsoever.

The "A. Ross" designer credit and the 2000 date place it squarely in a wave of millennium-themed novelty currency produced by private printers for the gift market.

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