The images are ON the bill, not IN the bill.
Hold the bill very carefully. Look at each picture and move your eyes down to the bottom of the image where you'll find a caption telling you who or what it is.
No president appears on either side of the US $10 bill: (1) Portraits appear on the front of current US bills, not the back. (2) The man shown on the front of the $10 bill is Alexander Hamilton. He was the first Secretary of the Treasury but never served as president.
10 dollar bill- U.S. Grant 20 dollar bill- Andrew Jackson 50 dollar bill- U.S. Grant 1 dollar bill- George Washington
Yes, Alexander Hamilton is on the $10. Every U.S. bill has a caption underneath the portrait on the front that identifies the person shown. The back also has a caption that identifies the building or scene shown. So if you pick up any $10 bill and look under the portrait, it will immediately tell you the man shown is Alexander Hamilton.
Hamilton
Alexander Hamilton is on the US $10 bill.
that dont ake sence
No, because the paper is the same size on the front and the back.
$10
No president appears on either side of the US $10 bill: (1) Portraits appear on the front of current US bills, not the back. (2) The man shown on the front of the $10 bill is Alexander Hamilton. He was the first Secretary of the Treasury but never served as president.
I don't know but I have one
The clock on the back of a hundred dollar bill reads 2:22.
It should be very clear to see, right on the front above the "R" in the word DOLLAR at the bottom of the bill.
Modern US $10 notes are red, orange, and yellow on the front, while the back is light orange with a green and black image of the US Treasury.
Neither side of the US $10 bill depicts a president. Both the portrait on the front and the small statue before the Treasury Building show Alexander Hamilton, the first Secretary of the Treasury.
He's not on any US coin. He's on the $10 bill.
The front shows a portrait of Alexander Hamilton, the first Secretary of the Treasury. The back shows a picture of the US Treasury building in Washington.
== On the back of the US 100 dollar bill clearly states: 4:15 on the Independence Hall. However, on the back of the NEW US $100 bill, the time on Independence Hall is clearly 4:10.==