What Happened To The $100,000 Dollar Bill? - YouTube

Channel: The Infographics Show

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Imagine you’re working at a diner in the 1930s, and you’ve just given the check to
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a well-dressed frequent customer who works at the bank down the street.
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You’re waiting for him to pay for his eggs, bread and coffee, which at 1930s prices comes
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out to about 35 cents.
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The customer keeps rustling around in his pockets, getting increasingly embarrassed,
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seemingly unable to find a few coins or a $1 bill so he can pay.
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Suddenly, he feels a piece of paper in his pocket and his face lights up.
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He pulls out a crisp $100,000 bill and hands it over.
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You don’t know whether to laugh at such an obvious scam, or be incensed at the fact
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that the man expected you to find $99.999.65 in change.
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Your manager comes over and shocks you by telling you that even though you can’t accept
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it and the customer shouldn’t be carrying it in the first place, the $100,000 bill he
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pulled out is, in fact, real.
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Why did the US ever issue such astronomically large dollar bills?
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And why did they stop?
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Well, we gathered up our team of top financial experts and economists to discover what happened
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to the $100,000 bill.
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You might be surprised to know that in 1928, the government started issuing currency in
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all sorts of large denominations, including $1,000, $5,000, and $10,000 bills.
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Apparently the economy was running so hot in the notoriously reckless 1920s, that people
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thought a $10,000 bill would somehow be useful to have circulating around.
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Little did the US know that the next year, it was about to experience a small financial
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setback known as “The Great Depression”.
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To be fair, there were practical reasons for the introduction of such bills.
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Banks and financial institutions relied on wire transfers to complete large transactions.
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However, in the 20s and 30s, those transfers were so slow and unreliable that many institutions
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preferred to simply hand over a $5,000 or $10,000 bill to take care of a debt or loan.
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So when did the $100,000 bill come into play?
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In December 1934, the US, or more specifically, the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, started
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printing Series 1934 $100,000 gold certificates.
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They only printed these certificates for three weeks in total, ending production in January
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of 1935.
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Although to us the certificates look less realistic than Monopoly money, at the time
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they were valid legal tender.
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However, the $100,000 bill could not be privately carried or used for personal transactions,
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meaning the diner customer in our opening story would have been in big trouble with
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his bank for carrying a $100k bill with him.
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Only certain Federal Reserve Banks could use the certificates for official transactions.
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The banks who wanted to use these bills had to prove to the US Treasurer that they had
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an equivalent amount of gold bullion held in the Treasury.
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In fact, the $100,000 bill can’t even be held by private citizens in the present day.
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Most of the 42,000 bills printed have been destroyed by the government by now, and the
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few remaining ones are accounted for and held by the Reserve.
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Private ownership of a $100,000 bill is actually illegal, and the government would have a lot
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of questions as to how you might have found one in the first place.
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Since the few remaining copies can be found in branches of the Federal Reserve, or prestigious
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institutions like the Smithsonian Museum, finding a real $100,000 bill would most likely
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involve a Nicholas Cage, “National Treasure” type of situation.
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Which no one should ever be involved in.
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The $100,000 bills printed by the Bureau featured a portrait of Woodrow Wilson, who served as
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US President from 1913 to 1921 and led the US through World War I.
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The bill was printed on a blend of 75% cotton and 25% linen which - surprise! - is actually
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what our money today is printed on as well.
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That’s right; even though we refer to and think of our money as paper, it is in fact
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printed on material closer to the T-shirt you’re wearing than actual paper.
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Other large denomination notes also featured notable politicians such as William McKinley
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on the $500 bill, Grover Cleveland on the $1,000 bill , founding father James Madison
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on the $5,000 bill , and on the $10,000 bill
.Salmon P. Chase?
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For those of you wondering whether your history teacher failed you even more than you thought,
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don’t worry - most people don’t recognize Salmon P. Chase at all.
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However, at one time, he was quite important in US politics.
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In the mid to late 1800s, Chase served as Ohio’s governor and senator, Chief Justice
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of the United States, and Lincoln’s initial Secretary of the Treasury.
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It was this last post that led to Chase being put on the $10,000 bill eventually.
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In 1861, the US started issuing the first greenback notes that eventually led to our
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modern currency.
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Chase was asked to pick someone whose face would be placed on the all-important $1 bill,
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and so Chase picked
(*pause*)...himself.
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The self-important Chase, who would undoubtedly be trying to get on a FOX reality show if
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he had been born in our times, thought showing his face to everyone in the US via the money
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they used would help elevate him to the presidency one day.
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Clearly, this dream never materialized.
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However, the Treasury decided to pay a small honor to the man who helped start modern banknotes
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by putting Chase’s face on the $10,000 bill in 1928, thereby ensuring that literally dozens
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of people would see it.
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However, Chase did go on to achieve some kind of greater fame, with his name eventually
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being used by the modern banking behemoth known as Chase Bank.
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Anyone who has spent hours listening to horrible covers of Shania Twain songs while on hold
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with a teller explaining to them why there are four additional fees on their credit card
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now, certainly knows Chase’s name.
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In this way, he leaves behind a legacy as well-liked as he probably was in real life.
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So why did the US stop printing all these high-value bills in 1946?
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Well, the bills were really only useful for bank transfers and real estate deals at that
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time.
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With prices being much lower in the 40s and 50s than we are used to, and wire transfers
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becoming faster and more reliable, it didn’t seem like a great idea to keep printing such
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absurdly high value bills.
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Not to mention the process for printing large denomination bills was pretty expensive.
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The production runs for large bills were relatively small; after all, a lot more $1 bills are
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printed than $1,000 ones.
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This means the US had to keep engraving new plates, used to produce the bills, for relatively
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small production runs.
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It was more logical and cost efficient to run a large order of $1, $5, or $10 bills
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instead.
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Even if large denomination bills are not being printed anymore, could you still somehow find
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a $1,000 or $5,000 bill circulating now?
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Well, most likely no.
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In 1969, the Federal Reserve recalled all large denomination bills from the $1,000 bill
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and up.
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The reason behind the Fed’s decision was that the President at the time thought such
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large denominations would make counterfeiting easier for criminals.
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Additionally, large denomination bills such as the $5,000 and $10,000 bill would make
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undetectable, illegal transactions, such as money laundering by the mafia, all too easy
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as well.
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In case you’re wondering, the crime-fearing President who gave the order to recall these
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large bills was Richard Nixon.
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Even though these large bills have been recalled, people do occasionally come across them in
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old family vaults or boxes.
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If you find any, you can take them to the bank and get the equivalent amount in cash,
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in reasonably smaller bills.
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The large denomination bills will then be sent straight into the Federal Reserve, not
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recirculated.
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A wiser course of action would be to sell the old bills to collectors, as most old large
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denomination bills are worth much more than their actual printed value.
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A standard, gently used $1,000 bill is worth around $1,600 on average.
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However, if you find a rarer example that’s valuable to collectors, a select few bills
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have been known to fetch over a million dollars.
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The current record for price paid for a $1,000 bill is $3.3 million.
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Which seems...counterintuitive, but after all, rich people need to spend their pools
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full of money on something.
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In any case, if you were looking for motivation to finally dust off and go through grandma’s
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old things, use the hope that you could find a $5,000 bill as incentive.
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Obviously, there are minimal chances of this happening unless grandma was secretly balling
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and quirky enough to stash her fortune in a box instead of leaving you a decent inheritance.
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So is there ever a chance we will return to printing $100,000 bills?
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Most financial experts say it’s highly unlikely.
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After all, most people today prefer to use their credit cards for large transactions
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instead of cash anyway.
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That’s partly why the largest bill issued by the US today is $100.
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The conditions under which the government would even consider printing such large bills
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again would have to be near-apocalyptic.
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Either a severe case of hyperinflation spiraling out of control, or the simultaneous crash
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of all digital systems of money transfers.
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And if either of those near-apocalyptic events happened, we’d probably have to go back
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to trading fruit and hunting meat anyway, so a $100,000 bill would still be useless.
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That’s not the financial experts’ opinion; just our team’s prediction here at The Infographics
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Show, which is why we’ve been stockpiling apples and hunting knives for years now.
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In other words, a return to $100,000 bills isn’t absolutely impossible, especially
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during this - so far - quite eventful 21st century.
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It’s just highly unlikely and nothing we would want to see happen.
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Ever.
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Now that you’ve learned the fascinating history of money in the US, go discover another
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incredible story or check out this other video instead!