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20 Dollars Federal Reserve Note, Large TWENTY, Branch ID in Letters

Issuer Federal Reserve System
Year 1928
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Currency Dollar (1785-date)
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Obverse description Central vignette of Andrew Jackson in an engraved oval portrait, executed in intaglio. Green Treasury seal appears to the right of the portrait, with two green serial numbers positioned at lower left and upper right. The note carries redemption clause text above the portrait within the upper border.
Obverse lettering FEDERAL RESERVE NOTE THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA REDEEMABLE IN GOLD ON DEMAND AT THE UNITED STATES TREASURY, OR IN GOLD OR LAWFUL MONEY AT ANY FEDERAL RESERVE BANK. WASHINGTON, D.C. JACKSON WILL PAY TO THE BEARER ON DEMAND TWENTY DOLLARS
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Comments

The 1928 series marked the United States' shift to the smaller "small-size" format, replacing the larger currency that had been standard since the Civil War. This transition was driven by cost savings and the mechanical demands of new high-speed counting equipment — not, as is sometimes assumed, by any change in monetary policy.

Pick 422B carries the "B" suffix indicating issuance through the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. The large "TWENTY" overprint on the reverse was a deliberate anti-counterfeiting measure introduced with this series, making denomination recognition faster for both tellers and the public. It was dropped from later small-size issues after the Treasury concluded it added little practical security value.

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