Modern bills:
$2 Thomas Jefferson
$5 Abraham Lincoln
$20 Andrew Jackson
$50 Ulysses S. Grant
Obsolete bills:
$500 William McKinley
$1,000 Grover Cleveland
$5,000 James Madison
$100,000 Woodrow Wilson (not used in general circulation)
On current or past bills but never President:
$10 - Alexander Hamilton, first secretary of the Treasury
$100 - Benjamin Franklin, Founding Father, statesman, inventor, author
$10,000 - Salmon P. Chase, secretary of the Treasury for Abraham Lincoln
Andrew Jackson is on the 20 and on the 50 is Ulysses S. Grant
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.
Yes!
Check the date again. US dollar bills were not made in 1967.
There is no exact record of how many 10,000 dollar bills were made before they stopped being printed in 1945.
10 dollar bills have a picture of Alexander Hamilton, the first Secretary of the Treasury. 100 dollar bills have a picture of statesman, inventor, and Founding Father Benjamin Franklin.
Andrew Jackson is on the 20 and on the 50 is Ulysses S. Grant
Two current ($10 and $100) and many older bills carried portraits of people who weren't presidents. There is no restriction on the portraits chosen for US banknotes. The choice is determined by the Treasury Department.
Both five dollar bills and fifty dollar bills are considered legal tender in the United States, they are issued by the US Treasury and can be used for purchasing goods and services. Additionally, both bills feature portraits of Presidents (Abraham Lincoln on the five dollar bill and Ulysses S. Grant on the fifty dollar bill).
The $10 and $100 bills do not feature Presidents. The $10 has Alexander Hamilton, who was the first US Secretary of the Treasury, and the $100 has Benjamin Franklin.
The presidents represent a national icon of the United States.
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.
He is not on any bills. He is on a one-dollar coin, a part of the Presidents, series.
The Bureau of Engraving and Printing has pages explaining the designs
Current bills:$10 - Alexander Hamilton, the first Secretary of the Treasury $100 - Benjamin Franklin, inventor, diplomat, and one of the Founding Fathers.Obsolete bills:$10,000 - Salmon P. Chase, Secretary of the Treasury (1861-1864)
George Washington is on the US Dollar bill, the dollar coin has different presidents.