Your question has two answers:
Yes, the U.S. government printed $1 bills in 1962
No, they weren't dated 1962 - they were 1957B
U.S. bills carry a "series year" that only changes when a new Treasury Secretary takes office, or sometimes when there is a new design. There was a design change in 1957 so that was the series year. When new Treasury officers were appointed, a letter suffix was added to the year - 1957A, then 1957B.
The next redesign came in 1963 when $1 Federal Reserve notes were first issued.
There were: 35,256,000 1 dollar bills printed ( Were Silver Certificates) 9,416,000 5 dollar bills printed ( Were Federal Reserve notes) 10,424,000 10 dollar bills printed ( Were Federal Reserve Notes) 11,300,500 20 dollar bills printed (Were Federal Reserve Notes) In total there were 66,396,500 bills printed for Hawaii.
The first federally issued $1 bills were printed in 1862. However before that many private banks printed $1 bills, and bills with that denomination were also printed by many jurisdictions during the colonial period.
The U.S. never printed any $1 bills with that date. In any case, all $1 bills printed from 1969 to the present are only worth face value.
No. The US has never printed a 1 million dollar bill, and no US bills of any denomination are dated 1940.
There were no Series of 1953 $1 bills printed. Perhaps you have a $2, $5 or $10 ?
There were: 35,256,000 1 dollar bills printed ( Were Silver Certificates) 9,416,000 5 dollar bills printed ( Were Federal Reserve notes) 10,424,000 10 dollar bills printed ( Were Federal Reserve Notes) 11,300,500 20 dollar bills printed (Were Federal Reserve Notes) In total there were 66,396,500 bills printed for Hawaii.
There are 1$, 2$, 5$, 10$, 20$, 50$, and 100$ bills currently printed.
The first federally issued $1 bills were printed in 1862. However before that many private banks printed $1 bills, and bills with that denomination were also printed by many jurisdictions during the colonial period.
The 1935 A subseries of $1 bills was the longest within the longest series of any US bill. They were printed during the first half of the 1940s.
The U.S. never printed any $1 bills with that date. In any case, all $1 bills printed from 1969 to the present are only worth face value.
1 dollar bills
Qs are printed as part of the serial number on older 1 dollar bills. It doesn't mean anything.
No. The US has never printed a 1 million dollar bill, and no US bills of any denomination are dated 1940.
There were no 1932 US or Canadian $1 bills printed due to the Great Depression.
There were no Series of 1953 $1 bills printed. Perhaps you have a $2, $5 or $10 ?
The U.S. never printed any $1 bills with that date.
The first $1 silver certificates were printed in 1886. The last bills were in the 1957-B series which actually ran to about 1965, because modern US bills are dated by their "series" rather than when they were printed. The Related Link shows dates and values for most US $1 bills issued since the Civil War.