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Yes. He is on the ten dollar bill. Hamilton was the first Secretary of the Treasury of the United States. Additionally, he wrote many of the Federalist Papers, and founded the New York Evening-Post and The Bank of New York. But because he was the first US Treasury Secretary, and he was killed in a duel by an Anti-Federalist made Hamilton something of a martyr for the Federalist cause.
I believe he founded the US bank so that state banks wouldn't collapse when too many people tried to withdraw at the same time. It was called the Bank of America. The above answer does not answer the question asked. The answer is: Alexander Hamilton was Secretary of the Treasury.
Hamilton worked in the war with George Washington as Washington's aide. He also became Secretary of the Treasury. In the early years of his life, he worked as a bookkeeper and a secretary in a merchants office in Nevis, a Caribbean island. When he moved to the united states in 1773 he went to college. He there trained men, called the Corsicans, drills in preparation for the war, as well as his early classes.
While women have made great strides in the business world, they still do have the same status as men. Many women, however, have taken the roles of CEOs and other important national offices such as Secretary of State, Senators, and governors.
Once can find out about what work is available in the US Treasury by checking a number of places online. Many government links may offer certain information about it, however, the best place to go is to the official us treasury website.
2, the Treasurer of the United States and the Secretary of the Treasury.
Two: the Treasurer of the United States and the Secretary of the Treasury.
There are no signatures on a US 1 dollar bill. The dollar bill features the signatures of the Secretary of the Treasury and the Treasurer of the United States on the bottom right side. However, these signatures are printed rather than physically signed.
Five 1 Secretary of State 2 Secretary of War 3 Secretary of Treasury 4 Attorney General 5 Postmaster General Five 1 Secretary of State 2 Secretary of War 3 Secretary of Treasury 4 Attorney General 5 Postmaster General
$1 Did you look at your pocket money and see how many $1 bills there are with his signature? John Snow was Treasury Secretary immediately before the current Secretary so these bills are among the most common ones in circulation.
Treasury bonds. They are considered the safest investment on earth, and as such, the 20-year T-Bond is a benchmark for many other investments. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treasury_security http://www.ustreas.gov/offices/treasurer/savings-bonds.shtml
The Secretary of State was William Seward, and the Secretary of the Treasury was Salmon Portland Chase. Both were Republicans and among all of Lincoln's cabinet, Chase was the most radical. As an aside, many Republicans had complained that Seward was more qualified to carry the Republican banner in the 1856 presidential elections. Fremont had received the nod.
department of treasury secretary
4 positions Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson Secretary of War Henry Knox Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton Attorney General Edmund Randolph
Unless your bill was hand-autographed separately, all bills carry facsimiles of the signatures of the Secretary and Treasurer in office at their time of issue. So many dollar bills are printed each year that they rarely have any extra value unless they are preserved in new, unfolded condition. If yours is from circulation, feel free to spend it on a soda or Sunday paper.
Hamilton served as Secretary of the Treasury and had many innovative ideas on economic issues. He established the National Bank.
So-called "Barr notes" (1963 B series $1 bills) are worth no more than other $1 bills of the same time period, about $1.25 in circulated condition and $2 to $4 if uncirculated.Barr notes have an undeserved reputation for rarity. Because Joseph Barr served as Secretary of the Treasury for less than a month at the end of the Johnson Administration, many people assume they were only printed during that month. In fact, the Treasury frequently prints bills from a particular series long after the officials shown (the Secretary of the Treasury or US Treasurer) have left office. The 1963 B series continued to be printed during most of 1969, with a total run of nearly half a billionnotes. Many who speculated by hoarding Barr notes were left with piles of paper each worth only a dollar each.