One Hundred Dollar Notes › Nationals › 1882 One Hundred Dollar National Bank Notes › Alabama Charters › 1882 $100 Fort Payne Alabama First National Bank
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Item | Info |
---|---|
Series | 1882 |
Charter | #4064 First National Bank of Fort Payne, Alabama |
Year Chartered | 1889, 236 Banks Chartered |
City Info | Fort Payne is a city in and county seat of DeKalb County, Alabama, United States. At the 2010 census, the population was 14,012. In the 19th century, the site of Fort Payne was the location of Willstown, an important village of the Cherokee people. For a time it was the home of Sequoyah, a silversmith who invented the Cherokee syllabary, enabling reading and writing in the language. The settlement was commonly called Willstown, after its headman, a red-headed mixed-race man named Will. According to Major John Norton, a more accurate transliteration would have been Titsohili. The son of a Cherokee adoptee of the Mohawk people, Norton grew up among Native Americans and traveled extensively throughout the region in the early 19th century. He stayed at Willstown several times. Source: Wikipedia |
Similar Cities | City name is unique, no others like it. |
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 | Plate letters A-C for $50 Notes, A for $100 Notes (Friedbergs, 20th Ed. P 99) |
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