Old Money from The Albert Lea National Bank Of Albert Lea | 4702

The Albert Lea National Bank Of Albert Lea

The Albert Lea National Bank Of Albert Lea in Minnesota printed $75,850 dollars worth of national currency. A production number that low doesn’t save room for many survivors. Currency from this bank will be rare. This national bank opened in 1892 and stopped printing money in 1902, which equals a 11 year printing period. That is actually quite brief in terms of bank existence. During its life, The Albert Lea National Bank Of Albert Lea issued 2 different types and denominations of national currency. We have examples of the types listed below. Your bank note should look similar. Just the bank name will be different. For the record, The Albert Lea National Bank Of Albert Lea was located in Freeborn County. It was assigned charter number 4702.

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The Albert Lea National Bank Of Albert Lea in Minnesota printed 1,517 sheets of $5 1882 brown back national bank notes. That sheet output number is small. Don’t expect too many of these to be available to collectors. You can take the total number of sheets printed and multiply that number by four to get the exact number of 1882 $5 brown back bank notes this bank issued. Each note has a portrait of James Garfield on the left hand side of the bill. These are very popular with collectors because they have different text layouts. Some notes are worth as little as a few hundred dollars, but most are worth a good deal more.
Series of 1882 $5 Brown Back

The Albert Lea National Bank Of Albert Lea printed 1,517 sheets of $10 1882 brown back national bank notes. That sheet output number is small. Don’t expect too many of these to be available to collectors. There were three $10 bills printed on a single sheet of 1882 brown backs. The design of the bill is similar to all earlier ten dollar national bank notes. The nickname comes from the fact that these bills have a brown seal and brown overprint. Despite saying series of 1882, these were actually printed by some banks up until 1908. The date you see in cursive relates to when the bank first started issuing brown back notes.
Series of 1882 $10 Brown Back

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