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I asked a similar question earlier but i had my information wrong. It is a confederate bill.

2007-07-25 09:39:37 · 4 answers · asked by Dylan S 1 in Business & Finance Other - Business & Finance

4 answers

I'm attaching a link to a Confederate currency website.

2007-07-25 09:46:30 · answer #1 · answered by PK 5 · 1 0

The only Confederate $1000 I see in my reference book is the 1861 Montgomery issue with portraits of Calhoun and Jackson, which is listed as RARE in any grade (only 607 were produced).
Be aware that copies and fakes of this note abound.
Here is a listing of serial numbers of known copies and fakes of the Confederate $1,000 dated May 28, 1861: 46, 82, 88, 176, 178, 197, 297, 321

2007-07-25 19:53:09 · answer #2 · answered by F. Frederick Skitty 7 · 1 0

This is just the effects of inflation not its value as a collectors item, where it would depend on how rare the item is.

In 2005, $1,000.00 from 1862 is worth:
$20,030.77 using the Consumer Price Index
$16,198.28 using the GDP deflator
using the value of consumer bundle *
$148,301.89 using the unskilled wage
$242,455.69 using the nominal GDP per capita
$2,162,465.28 using the relative share of GDP

2007-07-25 17:02:07 · answer #3 · answered by Raul21 5 · 0 1

go to the library they have plenty of books that you an look at old bill there use worth then and now i really enjoyed them. although those are reference books and you can't take them out

2007-07-25 16:45:53 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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