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. Binion’s $10,000 Federal Reserve Note – Iconic Display Piece from the Legendary

Currency:USD Category:Coins & Paper Money / Paper Money - United States Start Price:172,500.00 USD Estimated At:200,000.00 - 300,000.00 USD
. Binion’s $10,000 Federal Reserve Note – Iconic Display Piece from the Legendary
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[?]Live Online Auction Starts In 2025 Jul 23 @ 11:00 (UTC-04:00 : AST/EDT)
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The auction will take place on September 12, 2023 at AIA's office located at 1060 Main St., Suite #202, River Edge, NJ 07661 beginning at 11:00 AM
Las Vegas, Nevada and Washington, D.C., Fr. 2231-B, $10,000, Series of 1934, Federal Reserve Note.
Serial #B00002728A, Plate # D1/1, Julian | Morgenthau Jr., Signatures.
The note is PCGS graded About Uncirculated 50 with a note of Repaired Pin Holes. An extraordinary opportunity to own a piece of Las Vegas history and American numismatic history – this $10,000 Federal Reserve Note hails from the famed Binion’s Horseshoe Casino display, once part of the iconic “Million Dollar Display” installed by casino magnate Benny Binion in downtown Las Vegas. This note features the portrait of Salmon P. Chase, former U.S. Treasury Secretary and Chief Justice, and was originally designed for high-denomination bank transfers – never intended for public circulation. What elevates this piece beyond rarity is its provenance: one of the 100 notes once enshrined behind bulletproof glass in a transparent pyramid stack on Fremont Street, drawing millions of visitors over decades. The display was composed of a total of 100 Series 1934 $10,000 FRNs on the New York district framed by a large gold-color horseshoe. The open end of the horseshoe was on the bottom and the notes were exhibited in five columns of 20 notes each. Each note was carefully documented and preserved after the display was dismantled in the 1990s due to security upgrades. For nearly 35 years, these notes were housed in a golden horseshoe display at Binion’s Horseshoe Casino (now Binion’s Gambling Hall and Hotel) in Las Vegas. Originally assembled in 1964 and dismantled in 1999, each note in the display represented a colossal sum of money for its time. Highly collectible and increasingly scarce, Binion notes represent a unique intersection of banking history, Americana, and Las Vegas lore. (Ex-Binion’s Horseshoe Casino “Million Dollar Display”)