One Hundred Dollar Notes › Nationals › 1929 One Hundred Dollar National Bank Notes › Texas Charters › 1929 $100 Sudan Texas First National Bank
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Item | Info |
---|---|
Series | 1929 |
Charter | #12725 First National Bank of Sudan, Texas |
Year Chartered | 1925, 251 Banks Chartered |
City Info | Sudan is a city in Lamb County of West Texas, United States. The population was 1,039 at the 2000 census. According to The Handbook of Texas, the area where the town is now located was once on land granted to the county in 1892 by the 77 Ranch, owned by S.B. Wilson and Wilson Furneaux. The town developed in 1917-18 with a hotel and service from the Santa Fe railroad, which had built a branch line from Lubbock, Texas to Texico, New Mexico, in 1913. The land company manager and first postmaster, P.E. Boesen, suggested the town's name in 1918. A gin was built in 1922 and a bank established a year later. The town was incorporated in 1925, when the population was 600, up from a population of only fifteen in 1920. The first of several grain elevators was also erected in 1925 and the Sudan News began publication. The population was 1,014 in 1930, 1,336 in 1950, 976 in 1970, and 1,091 in 1980. In 1990 it was 983. The population reached 1,039 in 2000. Source: Wikipedia |
Similar Cities | City name is unique, no others like it. |
Seal Varieties | Small Brown |
See Also | If your note doesn't match try: 1. 1929 $100 Federal Reserve Bank Note 2. 1928 $100 Federal Reserve Note 3. 1928A $100 Federal Reserve Note 4. 1934 $100 Federal Reserve Note 5. 1934A $100 Federal Reserve Note 6. 1934B $100 Federal Reserve Note |
Other Info | 1. Value depends on notes known for charter, condition and market demand. |
Neat Fact | Notes 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. |
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