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Mini 1 Dollar Federal Reserve Note

Issuer Federal Reserve System (United States)
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Currency Dollar (1785-date)
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Obverse description Central vignette of George Washington in portrait, flanked by the Treasurer's signature and Federal Reserve Bank seal to the left and the Secretary's signature and Treasury seal to the right. Denomination numeral '1' appears in each corner, with guilloche underprint across the face. Inscriptions identify the note as a Federal Reserve Note of the United States, with the legal tender clause printed beneath the portrait.
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Reverse description Printed in green on white paper, the reverse carries the two sides of the Great Seal of the United States flanking the large central word 'ONE': the reverse of the seal at left shows the unfinished pyramid surmounted by the Eye of Providence with the motto ANNUIT CŒPTIS and the Roman numeral date MDCCLXXVI, while the obverse of the seal at right bears the American eagle with shield. The inscription IN GOD WE TRUST appears above 'ONE', and E PLURIBUS UNUM on the eagle's banner.
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This is a novelty miniature reproduction, not a genuine issue of the Federal Reserve System. The Federal Reserve has never authorized or produced a note in these dimensions — all legal tender U.S. currency is printed by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing to standardized specifications far exceeding these measurements. Items like this circulate in the collector and souvenir trade, sometimes marketed alongside genuine small-size notes in a way that can mislead newer collectors.

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