One Hundred Dollar Notes › Nationals › 1882 One Hundred Dollar National Bank Notes › Ohio Charters › 1882 $100 Columbus Ohio Commercial National Bank
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1882 $100 Brown Back - Front
1882 $100 Brown Back - Back
1882 $100 Date Back - Front
1882 $100 Date Back - Back
1882 $100 Value Back - Front
1882 $100 Value Back - Back
Item | Info |
---|---|
Series | 1882 |
Charter | #2605 Commercial National Bank of Columbus, Ohio |
Year Chartered | 1881, 108 Banks Chartered |
City Info | Columbus is the capital and largest city of the U.S. state of Ohio. It is the 14th-largest city in the United States, with a population of 860,090 as of 2016 estimates. This makes Columbus the third-most populous state capital in the United States, and the second-largest city in the Midwestern United States, after Chicago. It is the core city of the Columbus, Ohio, Metropolitan Statistical Area, which encompasses ten counties. With a population of 2,021,632, it is Ohio's third-largest metropolitan area. Source: Wikipedia |
Similar Cities | 20 banks with similar city. First 12 below: 1. Columbus, Ohio - First National Bank 2. Columbus, Wisconsin - First National Bank 3. Columbus, Ohio - National Exchange Bank 4. Columbus, Ohio - Franklin National Bank 5. Columbus, Indiana - First National Bank 6. Columbus, Georgia - Chattahoochee National Bank 7. Columbus Junction, Iowa - Loiusa County National Bank 8. Columbus, Georgia - First National Bank 9. Columbus, Ohio - Fourth National Bank 10. Columbus, Mississippi - First National Bank 11. Columbus, Nebraska - First National Bank 12. Columbus, Ohio - Clinton National Bank |
Seal Varieties | Brown, Blue |
See Also | If your note doesn't match try: 1. 1882 $100 Gold Certificate 2. 1878 $100 Legal Tender 3. 1880 $100 Legal Tender |
Other Info | 1. Value depends on notes known for charter, condition and market demand. 2. Rare and highly desirable National Note. |
Neat Fact | Full and partial sheets of National Bank Notes are known to exists. Families of bank officials, particularly those who signed the notes, kept them as keepsakes. Some sheets are extremely valuable. Others are more common. |
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