Five Dollar Notes › Nationals › 1929 Five Dollar National Bank Notes › Iowa Charters › 1929 $5 Glenwood Iowa Mills County National Bank
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1929 $5 Type 1 - Front
1929 $5 Type 2 - Front
Item | Info |
---|---|
Series | 1929 |
Charter | #1862 Mills County National Bank of Glenwood, Iowa |
Year Chartered | 1871, 153 Banks Chartered |
City Info | Glenwood is a city in and the county seat of Mills County, Iowa, United States. The population was 5,269 in the 2010 census, a decline from 5,358 in the 2000 census. Located in a hollow of the Loess Hills on the east side of the Missouri River, Glenwood was established by Mormons in 1848 as Coonsville. It prospered during the California Gold Rush largely due to the grain mill on Keg Creek. Coonsville was the scene of anti-Mormon mob violence, became the county seat of Mills County in 1851, and was renamed Glenwood after most of Mormons left for Utah in 1852. Glenwood is named for a Presbyterian minister, Glenn Wood. The community supported the creation of Nebraska Territory in 1854. Two Glenwood attorneys were elected to the Nebraska territorial legislature, and they were run out of town for accepting shares in Scriptown. At the end of the Civil War, an Iowa Veteran's Orphans Home was founded here. The evangelist Billy Sunday lived at the orphanage as a child. Source: Wikipedia |
Similar Cities | If your note doesn't match try: 1. Glenwood Springs, Colorado - Glenwood National Bank 2. Glenwood Springs, Colorado - Carbonate National Bank 3. Glenwood Springs, Colorado - Citizens National Bank 4. Glenwood, Minnesota - First National Bank 5. Glenwood City, Wisconsin - Farmers' National Bank |
Seal Varieties | Small Brown |
See Also | If your note doesn't match try: 1. 1929 $5 Federal Reserve Bank Note 2. 1928 $5 Federal Reserve Note 3. 1928A $5 Federal Reserve Note 4. 1928B $5 Federal Reserve Note 5. 1928C $5 Federal Reserve Note 6. 1928D $5 Federal Reserve Note 7. 1934 $5 Federal Reserve Note |
Other Info | 1. Value depends on notes known for charter, condition and market demand. |
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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