(5) $10 Mint RARE Uncirculated TEN Dollar Bill $10 Consecutive 2017A Kansas City BEP PACK  
Shipped in Protective sleeve inside a bubble envelope inside a Box so to protect and keep your purchase safe.

You can purchase additional lots and if possible each strap will be sequential in numbering. Check out our Ebay store and other auctions for more deals on new and graded currency. Don't see exactly what you want? You want to purchase 5 or 10 or 25 $2 bills or a combination of $5,s or 10's etc. Just let us know and we can make a special deal that is right for you. Just send us a message.

Each note shipped in a thick protective sleeve. 

These are some really nice $10 notes that we hand selected from the original BEP brick and we only have a few left in the original straps and can't get any more until late next month. These notes are from the Kansas City Reserve Bank which is one of the rarest and hard one to find. Don’t miss this great deal on these hard-to-find notes on this great offer and purchase today! You will not be disappointed.

We are collectors first and dealers second. With over 30 years in the Hobby and almost 20 of those buying and selling here on eBay we have firsthand experience of both sides of the deal. Your purchase will come promptly professionally packaged to insure safe delivery. We promise you will be pleased with your purchase and for any reason you are not reach out to us and we resolve any issue quickly and fair.


Shipped with Tracking USPS Ground from Wichita Kansas USA

Great for gifts and collectors.  Fresh MINT BEP pack. Quick shipping!!

Check out other auctions for packs of $1 - $2 -$5 - $10


The United States ten-dollar bill ($10) is a denomination of U.S. currency. The obverse of the bill features the portrait of Alexander Hamilton, who served as the first U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, two renditions of the torch of the Statue of Liberty (Liberty Enlightening the World), and the words "We the People" from the original engrossed preamble of the United States Constitution. The reverse features the U.S. Treasury Building. All $10 bills issued today are Federal Reserve Notes.

As of December 2018, the average life of a $10 bill in circulation is 5.3 years before it is replaced due to wear.[2] Ten-dollar bills are delivered by Federal Reserve Banks in yellow straps.

The source of Hamilton's portrait on the $10 bill is John Trumbull's 1805 painting that belongs to the portrait collection of New York City Hall. The $10 bill is unique in that it is the only denomination in circulation in which the portrait faces to the left. It also features one of two non-presidents on currently issued U.S. bills, the other being Benjamin Franklin on the $100 bill. Hamilton is also the only person not born in the continental United States or British America (he was from the West Indies) currently depicted on U.S. paper currency; three others have been depicted in the past: Albert Gallatin, Switzerland ($500 1862/63 Legal Tender), George Meade, Spain ($1,000 1890/91 Treasury Note), and Robert Morris, England ($1,000 1862/63 Legal Tender; $10 1878/80 Silver Certificate).

Large size note history[edit]

(approximately 7.4218 × 3.125 in ≅ 189 × 79 mm)

1805 portrait of Hamilton by John Trumbull
1863 $10 Legal Tender note featuring then-current U.S. president Abraham Lincoln
1880 $10 Legal Tender depicting Daniel Webster
Series 1880 $10 silver certificate featuring Robert Morris.
Series 1901 $10 Legal Tender depicting military explorers Meriwether LewisWilliam Clark, and an American bison.
1914 $10 Federal Reserve Note featuring Andrew Jackson

Small size note history[edit]

Series 1928 $10 Gold Certificate
1934 A Federal Reserve $10 Note
Hawaii overprint note.
The first 1953 $10 Silver Certificate printed (Smithsonian).

(6.14 in × 2.61 in ≅ 156 mm × 66 mm)

Series dates[edit]

Small size[edit]

TypeSeriesRegisterTreasurerSeal
National Bank Note Types 1 & 21929JonesWoodsBrown
Federal Reserve Bank Note1928AJonesWoodsBrown
TypeSeriesTreasurerSecretarySeal
Gold Certificate1928WoodsMellonGold
Silver Certificate1933JulianWoodinBlue
Silver Certificate1934JulianMorgenthauBlue
Silver Certificate1934 North AfricaJulianMorgenthauYellow
Silver Certificate1934AJulianMorgenthauBlue
Silver Certificate1934A North AfricaJulianMorgenthauYellow
Silver Certificate1934BJulianVinsonBlue
Silver Certificate1934CJulianSnyderBlue
Silver Certificate1934DClarkSnyderBlue
Silver Certificate1953PriestHumphreyBlue
Silver Certificate1953APriestAndersonBlue
Silver Certificate1953BSmithDillonBlue
Federal Reserve Note1928TateMellonGreen
Federal Reserve Note1928AWoodsMellonGreen
Federal Reserve Note1928BWoodsMellonGreen
Federal Reserve Note1928CWoodsMillsGreen
Federal Reserve Note1934JulianMorgenthauGreen
Federal Reserve Note1934 HawaiiJulianMorgenthauBrown
Federal Reserve Note1934AJulianMorgenthauGreen
Federal Reserve Note1934A HawaiiJulianMorgenthauBrown
Federal Reserve Note1934BJulianVinsonGreen
Federal Reserve Note1934CJulianSnyderGreen
Federal Reserve Note1934DClarkSnyderGreen
Federal Reserve Note1950ClarkSnyderGreen
Federal Reserve Note1950APriestHumphreyGreen
Federal Reserve Note1950BPriestAndersonGreen
Federal Reserve Note1950CSmithDillonGreen
Federal Reserve Note1950DGranahanDillonGreen
Federal Reserve Note1950EGranahanFowlerGreen
Federal Reserve Note1963GranahanDillonGreen
Federal Reserve Note1963AGranahanFowlerGreen
Federal Reserve Note1969ElstonKennedyGreen
Federal Reserve Note1969AKabisConnallyGreen
Federal Reserve Note1969BBañuelosConnallyGreen
Federal Reserve Note1969CBañuelosShultzGreen
Federal Reserve Note1974NeffSimonGreen
Federal Reserve Note1977MortonBlumenthalGreen
Federal Reserve Note1977AMortonMillerGreen
Federal Reserve Note1981BuchananReganGreen
Federal Reserve Note1981AOrtegaReganGreen
Federal Reserve Note1985OrtegaBakerGreen
Federal Reserve Note1988AVillalpandoBradyGreen
Federal Reserve Note1990VillalpandoBradyGreen
Federal Reserve Note1993WithrowBentsenGreen
Federal Reserve Note1995WithrowRubinGreen
Federal Reserve Note1999WithrowSummersGreen
Federal Reserve Note2001MarinO'NeillGreen
Federal Reserve Note2003MarinSnowGreen
Federal Reserve Note2004ACabralSnowGreen
Federal Reserve Note2006CabralPaulsonGreen
Federal Reserve Note2009RiosGeithnerGreen
Federal Reserve Note2013RiosLewGreen
Federal Reserve Note2017CarranzaMnuchinGreen
Federal Reserve Note2017ACarranzaMnuchinGreen

Rejected redesign and new 2020 bill[edit]

On June 17, 2015, Treasury Secretary Jack Lew announced that a woman's portrait would be featured on a redesigned ten-dollar bill by 2020. The Department of Treasury was seeking the public's input on who should appear on the new bill during the design phase.[9]

Removal of Hamilton was controversial. Many believed that Hamilton, as the first Secretary of the Treasury, should remain on U.S. Currency in some form, all the while thinking that U.S. Currency was long overdue to feature a female historical figure – names that had been raised included Eleanor RooseveltHarriet Tubman, and Susan B. Anthony. This led to the Treasury Department stating that Hamilton would remain on the bill in some way. The $10 bill was chosen because it was scheduled for a regular security redesign, a years-long process.[10] The redesigned ten-dollar bill was to be the first U.S. note to incorporate tactile features to assist those with visual disabilities.[11]

On April 20, 2016, it was announced that Alexander Hamilton would remain the primary face on the $10 bill, due in part to the sudden popularity of the first Treasury Secretary after the success of the 2015 Broadway musical Hamilton. It was simultaneously announced that Harriet Tubman's likeness would appear on the $20 bill while Andrew Jackson would now appear on the reverse with the White House.[12]

The design for the reverse of the new $10 bill was set to feature the heroines of the Women's Suffrage Movement in the United States, including Susan B. AnthonyAlice PaulSojourner TruthElizabeth Cady StantonLucretia Mott, and the participants of the 1913 Woman Suffrage Procession who marched in Washington D.C. in favor of full voting rights for American women.[13]

On August 31, 2017, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said that he would not commit to putting Tubman on the twenty-dollar bill, explaining "People have been on the bills for a long period of time. This is something we'll consider; right now we have a lot more important issues to focus on."[14] According to a Bureau of Engraving and Printing spokesperson, the next redesigned bill will be the ten-dollar bill, not set to be released into circulation until at least 2026. Because of this, it appears that a redesigned twenty-dollar bill featuring Tubman might not be released until years after the original 2020 release date.[15][16]