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1929 $10 Bill Value – How Much Is 1929 First National Bank of Amherst Texas $10 Worth?

Ten Dollar NotesNationals1929 Ten Dollar National Bank NotesTexas Charters1929 $10 Amherst Texas First National Bank

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Sell 1929 $10 First National Bank of Amherst, Texas Bill
Item Info
Series1929
Charter#12619 First National Bank of Amherst, Texas
Year Chartered1925, 251 Banks Chartered
City InfoAmherst is a city in Lamb County, Texas, United States. The population was 721 at the 2010 census. Amherst, on U.S. Route 84 and the BNSF Railway in west central Lamb County, began in 1913 as a Pecos and Northern Texas Railway station for William E. Halsell's Mashed O Ranch. A townsite was platted a mile from the Santa Fe depot in 1923 and named for Amherst College by a railroad official. The post office opened in 1924. By 1930 thirty-five businesses and 964 people constituted a lively trade center, and amenities included a newspaper, the Amherst Argus. For many years the Amherst Hotel, the town's first permanent building, was the most popular stopping place between Clovis, New Mexico and Lubbock, Texas. The population in Amherst was 749 in 1940, when the first co-op hospital in Texas was built there. Incorporation came in 1970, when the population was 825. In 1980 the population was 971, and businesses included five cotton gins and two grain elevators. Sod House Spring Monument, commemorating the first cow camp in the area, is located 6 miles northwest of Amherst, and Plant X, one of Southwestern Public Service's largest generating plants, is nine miles north. Source: Wikipedia
Similar CitiesIf your note doesn't match try:
1. Amherst, Massachusetts - First National Bank
2. Amherst, Nebraska - First National Bank
Seal VarietiesSmall Brown
See AlsoIf your note doesn't match try:
1. 1929 $10 Federal Reserve Bank Note
2. 1928 $10 Federal Reserve Note
3. 1928A $10 Federal Reserve Note
4. 1928B $10 Federal Reserve Note
5. 1928C $10 Federal Reserve Note
6. 1934 $10 Federal Reserve Note
Other Info1. Value depends on notes known for charter, condition and market demand.
Neat FactNotes from common charters are less valuable compared to rarer charters. Value also depends on type, denomination and total notes known for city, state and region. Ultimate determination of value is collector demand.
Other $10 Bills
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