Middleburgh, PA The First NB $10 1929 Ty. 2 |
$10 1929 Ty. 2 Middleburgh, PA - The First NB Charter # 4156 PMG 64 EPQ. SN A000714
|
1144185-018
| $10 1929 Ty. 2 Small Size | United States | 64 EPQ |
|
New York, NY The NB of Queens County In Ch. # 1329 |
New York, NY The NB of Queens County In Ch. # 13296 first title PMG 25 $10 1929 Ty 1 175-350 SN F001027A pp L155/191 BEP plates which are even better on Type 2 notes--see my $5 and $10 on Flushing NB IN NYC!
|
1887709-034
| $10 1929 Ty. 1 Small Size | United States | VF 25 |
|
NY, NY Flushing NB In Ch. # 13296 $5 Ty. 2 |
New York, NY Flushing National Bank In Ch. # 13296 PMG 15 $5 1929 Ty 2 SN A019226 pp H334/420. New York, NY Flushing NB IN (13296) had an unusual 2-font bank layout observed only on notes from this bank. The Flushing NB note is from a BEP plate made in September 1933, following a title change. Ernest L. King, Cashier and Theo. P. Lawlor, President.
|
1887709-035
| $5 1929 Ty. 2 Small Size | United States | F 15 |
|
NY, NY Flushing NB in Ch. # 13296 $10 Ty. 2 |
New York, NY Flushing National Bank in Ch. # 13296 PMG 30 $10 1929 Ty 2 SN A003842 pp B175/243. Three truly exotic layouts have been found in the BEP group that involved mixing of 8-point Copperplate Gothic and 12-point Gothic Condensed fonts within the bank name. These are the only known occurrences in the Series of 1929 where bank names were set using two different fonts. The Reading layout, and a lookalike Eureka, Nevada (11784), that were made respectively in March and May 1931, were a harbinger of the layouts used on the emergency Series of 1929 Federal Reserve Bank Notes of 1933-4. New York, NY Flushing NB IN (13296) had an unusual 2-font bank layout observed only on notes from this bank. The Flushing NB note is from a BEP plate made in September 1933, following a title change.
|
5013804-007
| $10 1929 Ty. 2 Small Size | United States | VF 30 |
|
Atchison, KS The City NB Ch. # 11405 PMG 25 $5 |
Atchison, KS The City NB Ch. # 11405 PMG 25 $5 1929 Ty 1 SN E000897A pp K26/175 GPO Plate. A moderately circulated small size example from this Kansas City bank. John W. Hartman, Cashier and S.J. Blythe, President. Famed aviator Amelia Earhart was born in Atchison, KS. Five years to the day that American aviator Charles Lindbergh became the first pilot to accomplish a solo, nonstop flight across the Atlantic Ocean, female aviator Amelia Earhart becomes the first Pilot to repeat the feat, landing her plane in Ireland after flying across the North Atlantic. This was Earhart's second time to cross the Atlantic. In 1928, as a member of a three-person crew, she crossed the Atlantic in an aircraft while functioning as the person to keep the plane's log. For her solo transatlantic crossing in 1932, she was awarded a Distinguished Flying Cross by the U.S. Congress.
|
1887703-016
| $5 1929 Ty. 1 Small Size | United States | VF 25 |
|
Duluth, MN The Poineer NB Ch. # 13078 PMG 15 $5 |
Duluth, MN The Poineer NB Ch. # 13078 PMG 15 $5 1929 Ty 1 SN F000478A pp L29/225?. Ty 1 and 2 $5s only in Small. From GPO plates.
|
1514699-004
| $5 1929 Ty. 1 Small Size | United States | F 15 |
|
Troy, NY The Union NB Ch. # 963 PMG 25 $5 |
Troy, NY The Union NB Ch. # 963 PMG 25 $5 1929 Ty 2 SN A009281 pp K206/388 with BEP Plates. Note that the title uses Gothic Condensed No. 529 Font used only by BEP; this is not very common especially on Type 2 notes. Joseph E. Kober, Cashier and Edward Strecker, President. Ex The Collar City Collection of NY Nationals
|
1513938-024
| $5 1929 Ty. 2 Small Size | United States | VF 20 |
|
Malden, MA The Second NB Ch. # 11014 PMG 35EPQ $10 |
Malden, MA The Second NB Ch. # 11014 PMG 35EPQ $10 1929 Ty 1 SN C002560A pp I66/271. Surprisingly few of the GPO variety notes survive and those that do are generally well worn. This note is an exception. Although this bank opened in 1917, it elected to wait and only issue small size notes. The officers who piloted this bank were Charles W. Phinney, Cashier and Arthur P. Hardy, President. Malden, a hilly woodland area north of the Mystic River in Middlesex County, was settled by Puritans in 1640 on land purchased in 1629 from the Pennacook tribe. It was named after Maldon, England by Joseph Hills, an early settler and landholder and was incorporated as a separate town in 1649 under the name "Mauldon".
|
8084357-037
| $10 1929 Ty. 1 Small Size | United States | VF 35 EPQ |
|
Chicago, IL American NB and TC Ch. # 13216 PMG 25 |
Chicago, IL American NB and TC Ch. # 13216 PMG 25 $20 1929 Ty 1 SN A000131A pp A101/15. 2d Title 1/3/33 (formerly Straus NB and TC). John H. Kraft, Cashier and S.J.T. Straus, President who's signature includes an impressive ending loop. BEP Plates.
|
1888599-045
| $20 1929 Ty. 1 Small Size | United States | VF 25 |
|
Baudette, MN The First NB Ch. # 10710 PMG 20 $20 |
Baudette, MN The First NB Ch. # 10710 PMG 20 $20 1929 Ty 1 Fr. 1802-1 SN D000050A pp D11/77. Only issuer in the County Seat of Lake of the Woods County. Baudette was started by European Americans as a steamboat landing and lumber town with a sawmill, after the railroad was constructed through this area in 1901. It was named for Joseph Beaudette, a trapper of French-Canadian descent who had been in the area since the early 1880s. The post office at Baudette began in 1900, first called "Port Hyland", after postmaster Daniel Hyland. The name was changed to "Baudette" in 1901. Baudette had a station of the Minnesota and Manitoba Railroad, since absorbed by the Canadian National Railway.
|
1514693-007
| $20 1929 Ty. 1 Small Size | United States | VF 20 |
|
Reading, PA The Reading NB and TC Ch. # 4887 |
Reading, PA The Reading NB and TC Ch. # 4887 PMG 30 $10 1929 Ty 1 SN D000494A D96/37 BEP Berks County bank's 2d title. Bank officers are W.Y. Mast, Jr., Cashier and Henry K. Harrison, President. Three truly exotic layouts have been found in the BEP group that involved mixing of 8-point Copperplate Gothic and 12-point Gothic Condensed fonts within the bank name. These are the only known occurrences in the Series of 1929 where bank names were set using two different fonts. The Reading layout, and a lookalike Eureka, Nevada (11784), that were made respectively in March and May 1931, were a harbinger of the layouts used on the emergency Series of 1929 Federal Reserve bank notes of 1933-4. New York, NY Flushing NB IN (13296) had an unusual 2-font bank layout observed only on notes from this bank. The Flushing NB note is from a BEP plate made in September 1933, following a title change. You can see both titles from this bank in my NY, NY small type Set.
|
1887711-009
| $10 1929 Ty. 1 Small Size | United States | VF 30 |
|