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As with any US bill printed after 1928, the series letter if any will be located below or to the right of the date.Series letters can be a bit confusing:First, the dates on US bills don't indicate when they were printed, only the main grouping under which they were issued. Before 1974 a new date was used only when there was a design change or different printing method. If a bill used the same design the date wasn't changed. The oddest example is the 1935 series of $1 bills that was issued until the mid-1960s! Starting in 1974 a new date is used whenever a new Treasury Secretary takes office, so dates on bills change much more often than in the past.Second, when a new date is put on bills a letter is not used at first. "A" is added only after one of the Treasury officials resigns and a new person takes office. That is, "A" is the second set of bills with that date, "B" is the third, and so on. Before 1974, the letter would be changed if either a new Treasury Secretary or Treasurer took office. Since then the date changes when a new Secretary is appointed, and a letter is added when a new Treasurer is appointed.
On account of. Normally on behalf of a deceased person. Courtesy of Timber Cash of Oakland, CA
The noun 'secretary' is a word for:a person employed by an individual or an organization to assist with correspondence, keep records, make appointments, and whatever tasks are necessary to conduct daily business;an official in charge of a government department;a writing desk with shelves above the work space.
Indirect
Yes, it is likely.
Secretary of the treasury
Secretary of Treasury
As a group, they are part of the Cabinet; separately, they are a Secretary of the Department--such as Secretary of the Treasury, etc.
In July of 2014, the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States was Jacob Lew. He is the 76th person to hold that position.
The fifth person in line to become President is the Secretary of the Treasury; following the Vice President, the Speaker of the House, the President Pro Tempore of the Senate, and the Secretary of State.
Robert Morris was the first person appointed Secretary of the Treasury by George Washington, but Morris declined this office; thus the first Secretary of the Treasury was Alexander Hamilton, who was appointed at Morris's suggestion. Morris had held a similar position as Superintendent of Finance under the Continental Congress.
Actually being a secretary is a pretty cool job if u are a socialising person it is a good position.
No such person exists. Rather, Alexander Hamilton was the first secretary of the treasury of the US. And he is featured on the modern $10 bill.
It is a tie between all of them. The Secretary of State does not sign money. That is done by the Secretary of the Treasury. All dollar bills are also signed by the Treasurer. And no, they aren't the same person. But, if your question is which Secretary of the Treasury signed the fewest bills I'd probably go with the shortest tenured sectreas and that would be Joseph Barr. He was only sectreas for a year and his signature is only on 1.00 dollar bills. 458 million of them. Perhaps Hamilton or another person signed fewer.
A secretary is the leader of an executive department
President, Vice President, Speaker of the House, President pro tempore of Senate, Secretary of State, Secretary of Treasury, Secretary of Defense, Attorney General, Secretary of Interior, Sec of Agriculture, Sec of Commerce,
Albert Gallatin... I'm 100% sure.