First one on the first Certification List and so the first Social Security check, check number 00-000-001, was issued to Ida May Fuller in the amount of $22.54 and dated January 31, 1940.
Social Security Card issued in California.
Social Security numbers were first issued by the Social Security Administration in November 1935, more than 2400 years after Pythagoras died.
There is no specific state that corresponds to a Social Security number starting with 147. The first three digits of a Social Security number indicate the location where it was issued, but they do not correspond to a specific state. Social Security numbers are issued by the Social Security Administration (SSA) and are not tied to a particular geographic location.
The first three numbers of 318-361 indicates the social security number was issued in Illinois (IL). See related links for social security number ranges, by issue location.
ida mae
Absolutely no one. The first check for social security wasn't cut until the 1940's.
The "lowest" social security number (001-01-0001) was the one issued to Grace D. Owen of Concord, New Hampshire the first three digits of social security numbers are used as identifiers for where a person was born
Have my social security check been direct deposit this month of May.
He probably received his first social security card when he worked part-time in high school in Honolulu; but some sources report he didn't receive a social security card until he attended college in Los Angeles.
By comparing the first three digits of the Social Security Number you can identify the state in which the subject resided at the time the number was issued.627-645 Texas449-467 Texas
First you will have to apply with the social security administration to begin receiving your SSB at the age of 62 and then you will find out when you will receive your first benefit check. You can apply online by going to the SSA.gov website SOCIAL SECURITY BENEFITS ONLINE AND CHOOSE Retirement/Medicare you will go to the Social Security Benefit Application form
Social Security benefits are issued to those who have reached "retirement eligibility," which can occur based either on age or on a disabling condition. In other words, it's one or the other, whichever occurs first. So the answer to your question is "no."For the record, Social Security benefits also are issued in other situations, e.g. to the dependent children of persons who die and have earned Social Security qualification, but these other situations have no bearing on the answer to your question.