• U.S. Currency:
  • Large Size Notes,
  • Demand Notes

Greensheet & Friedberg® Price Guide

coin-icon-tr
Filter
Year

Sort by

Sponsor

shop eBay

Sponsor

shop David Lawrence Rare Coins

Sponsor

shop Great Collections

Sponsor

shop

Sponsor

shop CAC

The Greysheet Catalog (GSID) of the Demand Notes series of Large Size Notes in the U.S. Currency contains 22 distinct entries with CPG® values between $1,900.00 and $474,000.00. Demand notes were originally issued in 1861 as the Civil War escalated and became the earliest form of

The Greysheet Catalog (GSID) of the Demand Notes series of Large Size Notes in the U.S. Currency contains 22 distinct entries with CPG® values between $1,900.00 and $474,000.00.

Demand notes were originally issued in 1861 as the Civil War escalated and became the earliest form of US paper currency that Americans are used to using today. The term "greenback" which many in the numismatic community and the mainstream public use to describe United States paper money, originated with the demand notes of 1861. Congress authorized a total of $60 million to be issued in denominations of $5, $10, and $20, and these were first released in August 1861. Demand notes are the only large-size United States notes to not display the Treasury Seal or names of the Treasurer and Register of the Treasury, and they bear just one serial number. They were issued with the following obligation: "The United States promise to pay to the bearer [X] dollars on demand Payable to the Assistant Treasurer of the United States at [New York, Philadelphia, Boston, Cincinnati, or St. Louis]. Receivable in payment of all public dues."

See More See Less
1861 $5 (Fr. 1)
Value Range: $1,900 - $60,000
$1,900 - $60,000
1861 $5 (Fr. 1a)
Value Range: $42,000 - $105,500
$42,000 - $105,500
1861 $5 (Fr. 2)
Value Range: $1,900 - $474,000
$1,900 - $474,000
1861 $5 (Fr. 3)
Value Range: $1,900 - $21,500
$1,900 - $21,500
1861 $5 (Fr. 4)
Value Range: $12,000 - $20,000
$12,000 - $20,000
1861 $5 (Fr. 5)
Value Range: $10,000 - $72,000
$10,000 - $72,000
1861 $10 (Fr. 6)
Value Range: $3,750 - $32,500
$3,750 - $32,500
1861 $10 (Fr. 6a)
Value Range: $42,000 - $108,000
$42,000 - $108,000
1861 $10 (Fr. 7)
Value Range: $3,750 - $27,500
$3,750 - $27,500
1861 $10 (Fr. 7a)
Value Range: $180,000 - $180,000
$180,000 - $180,000
1861 $10 (Fr. 8)
Value Range: $3,750 - $24,000
$3,750 - $24,000
1861 $10 (Fr. 9)
Value Range: $26,500 - $36,000
$26,500 - $36,000

Sponsor

shop eBay
1861 $10 (Fr. 10)
Value Range: $60,000 - $60,000
$60,000 - $60,000
1861 $20 (Fr. 11)
Value Range: $36,000 - $96,000
$36,000 - $96,000
1861 $20 (Fr. 12)
Value Range: $36,000 - $141,000
$36,000 - $141,000
1861 $20 (Fr. 13)
Value Range: $36,000 - $96,000
$36,000 - $96,000
1861 $20 (Fr. 14)
Value Range: $72,000 - $72,000
$72,000 - $72,000

Dealer Directory

View All Dealers

Greysheet News

View All News
Moldova. New Silver Proof Coins Honour Memory of Respected Queen Consort
Moldova. New Silver Proof Coins Honour Memory of Respected Queen Consort
12/12/2025

The National Bank of Moldova release commemorative coins remembering Queen Marie of Romania.

Modern US Olympic Coinage
Modern US Olympic Coinage
12/12/2025

The Olympics as we know them began in 1896, but it took until 1952 for the first modern Olympic coin to be struck.