The US base currency contains the following denominations (all of them are presidents except for Hamilton and Franklin):
$1 - George Washington
$2 - Thomas Jefferson
$5 - Abraham Lincoln
$10 - Alexander Hamilton (not US president because born in Canada; was first Treasury Secretary)
$20 - Andrew Jackson
$50 - Ulysses S. Grant
$100 - Benjamin Franklin (diplomat, writer, scientist, and inventor; never a US president)
The US currency once had 5 larger denominations (each with the face of a president except Chase) that are no longer in public use:
$500 - William McKinley
$1,000 - Grover Cleveland
$5,000 - James Madison
$10,000 - Salmon P. Chase (U.S. Treasury Secretary under President Lincoln)
$100,000 - Woodrow Wilson
While there has been some (VERY) occasional speculation about issuing $200 bills, the US has never printed any bills with that denomination.
Ben Franklin! These $100.00 Bills are affectionately know as "Benjamin's"!!
A portrait of Alexander Hamilton, the first Secretary of the Treasury, has appeared on all US $10 bills since 1928.
Three dollar bills exist but they were never issued by the US government, although the US issued a three dollar coin from 1854 to 1889. Earlier, some colonies printed three dollar bills. When banks were allowed to print money in the early days of the US, some printed legitimate, legal three dollar bills. The Confederacy also produced three dollar bills.
No. US one dollar bills were not made in 1950.
U.S. $50 bills are red, white and blue. See the link below for the Bureau of Engraving and Printing's images and explanations.
Older dollar bills are indeed still in circulation. US bills aren't removed from circulation until they wear out.
If you mean whose PORTRAIT is on the bill, the Series 1928 and 1934 bills carried a picture of President William McKinley. Those were the last $500 bills printed in the US.
You can get themat the bank.
There's no 2005 $500 bill. The last high-denomination US bills were printed in 1945 and all carried a 1934 series date.
No one's photo is on any US bills because bills use engravings, not photographs. No one's image is on any "million dollar" US bill because it doesn't exist. The highest-value bill printed for circulation was $10,000, and they were discontinued in 1945. The highest-value US bills ever printed was a set of $100,000 gold certificates that were only used inside the Federal Reserve System.
Mostly dead presidents but also Alexander Hamilton and a rabble raiser Ben Franklin. On the 1 through 100 dollar bills who is on the face relates to what is on the back. Before 1956 each of these bills had a building on the back related to who was on the face. after 1956 the 2 dollar bills back changed to a bunch of people.