Congratulations on finding your Brown back!! I love the older printing they did on the old notes! So beautifully detailed and colored! Thanks for sharing your wisdom with us! Blessings always my dear friend! ❤️🙏😊
Hi Stu, Thanks for sharing the tip on coins. And congrats again on your Brown Back note. I’m glad I was there as well when you picked it up at the show. Also later I realized I also have a $5 1882 series Brown Back from the Morris IL. bank ungraded. I think it’s about a 10-12? I picked up at my local coin shop a few months ago. So I can check off another one on the top 100. That will make 12 I have. Still way behind your 32 or so. Take care. 🙏 Bill 😎👍
Such a beautiful note! I really like how big the charter number is on the back of the note. One of my dream notes is a brown back from my city but unfortunately that comes with a HEFTY price tag so maybe one day lol great video!
Congrats on your purchase. It is a great piece of history with a President no longer on currency. That front was really busy with all those signatures and numbers, and the large bank name and location. Love the back though, for being relatively plain (no monument, or vehicles, vignettes, etc), it is a favorite design. Those Barr Notes, found at least one for every district in circulation in a couple years, they really are pretty available in circulation. Conversely, for 1993, I have only found 5 or 6 in the same amount of time.
I like the brown backs in any denomination. Last year I picked up a VF35 $5 San Francisco California Brown back. I probably paid a lot too much. But the way they are going up, someday it may be worth it.😊
I’ve played the crack out grade with both coins and notes. Notes are certainly easier to identify, but you can still tell apart individual coins. Just have to look at the nuances: a mark here or a spot of toning there. As for the population reports, unless it’s sent in graded for reconsideration or sent in as a crossover, the report won’t reflect that. I have a coin with 10 minted, and there are more than 10 in the population report. Just tells me people are playing that game with those coins.
The note isn’t an error, just the grading info. I wouldn’t think it adds anything to the value. It’s just neat! This particular note isn’t the greatest but it is as a bargain!
The only book I have that tells survival numbers is my top 100 American Bank notes book. I believe Track and Price does a good job on survival rates. Ontario 100 has great resources for that.
I think you got a pretty good deal on that note.The book may say its not rare,but in reality,how many are actually out there? probably not many.Can you imagine how deep Andrew Shiva's pockets are to have his collection.He is the only private collector to have a $500 first charter series note, from.......NY. nice addition bro
@@Stuplubakcurrency Well, I don't suppose either is infallible. I'm rather curious, will you contact the grading company and ask? Do they admit to errors in grading?
Great channel. I got unsubcribed somehow. In the last few months, going to ATMs I've been getting many bills in numerical sequence. And many star notes. Dates within the last 10-15 years. 2 and 3 in sequence one hundred dollar bills. 2 and 4 in 50s 4 and 6 in 20s 4 one dollar star notes in sequence from change back. Plus, star notes. One or two from 20s, 50s, and 100s. All in un-circulated condition. Is it worth saving them in the short term or only way down the road would they be worth anything extra? Always love seeing notes from the early 1900s and earlier.
It’s very common for ATMs to have crisp, uncirculated sequential notes. The stars are certainly worth keeping. There is a lot of misinformation about the BEP not doing sequential notes anymore. Watch for an upcoming video with more info on that. I don’t see any additional value on sequential modern notes.