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| 表面の説明 | The obverse carries a portrait vignette of John J. Knox Jr., 4th Comptroller of the Currency, positioned at the left, rendered in fine intaglio engraving against an intricate green guilloche underprint. The denomination ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS appears in large letters across the note, with the issuing national bank's name, city, and state inscribed in the central panel. A red charter number and Treasury seal appear to the right, with the Series of 1902 date prominently incorporated into the face design. |
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| 表面の銘文 | SECURED BY UNITED STATES BONDS OR OTHER SECURITIES UNITED STATES OF AMERICA SERIES OF 1902 THE NATIONAL BANK OF [CITY] WILL PAY TO THE BEARER ON DEMAND ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS [City, State, Date] |
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The 1902 series National Bank Notes were issued by over 12,000 individual chartered banks across the United States, each printing its own name, charter number, and officers' signatures onto a federally produced sheet. That decentralized model makes collecting by issuing bank — rather than by series — the dominant approach, since notes from small-town banks in low-population states like Nevada or Wyoming were printed in tiny quantities and rarely survived circulation.
The series ran through three distinct subtypes distinguished primarily by the presence or absence of the "1902-1908" date panel on the reverse. The third subtype, running to 1927, was produced after that panel was removed. At the $100 denomination, surviving examples from any subtype are scarce; most national bank note collections are built around the lower denominations where more notes entered daily commerce.