$1 - George Washington on the front, the US seal on the back, among other things
$2 - Thomas Jefferson on the back, signing of the Declaration of Independence on the back (since he wrote it)
$5 - Abraham Lincoln on the front, Lincoln Memorial on the back (his memorial)
$10 - Alexander Hamilton on the front, US Treasury on the back (since he set it up)
$20 - Andrew Jackson on the front, White House on the back (very ironic since Andrew Jackson not only trashed the White House at a party but thought paper money would be the United States' demise)
$50 - Ulysses S Grant on the front, United States Capitol on the back
$100 - Benjamin Franklin on the front, Independence Hall on the back (since he was quite ardent in the Revolution)
It's easy to figure out the correct answer of $453,600 once you know two facts: first, current US bills weigh 1 gram each and second, there are 453.6 grams in one US pound. That means 10 US pounds is 4,536 grams, so 10 pounds of bills would be 4,536 pictures of Ben Franklin. Finally, 4,536 x $100 = $453,600
There are no 1986-dated $1 bills, but regardless of the date, bills with pictures of Santa, Elvis, the Easter Bunny, et. al. on them are novelty items with no added value. Normally they're made by pasting a picture on top of Washington's portrait.
Current US bills (notes) weigh exactly one gram regardless of denomination. There are 454 grams (rounded to the nearest whole number) in one US pound. Therefore, one pound of US $20 bills would be worth $9,080!
Older dollar bills are indeed still in circulation. US bills aren't removed from circulation until they wear out.
All US bills are printed on a special paper made of a blend of cotton and linen fibers. Unlike common paper, it doesn't contain wood fibers. Its supply is tightly controlled and only available to the government.
The link below has pictures and facts about the designs used on US $50 bills since 1928.
While it's not Answers.com policy to say "use the Internet", that's the best approach in this case because there are hundreds of thousands of such images. Enter the terms US 100 dollar bill pictures into any major search engine and you should find pictures of bills dating back to the 19th century.
This web site cannot post pictures. But click on the "related links" section to see some pictures. Note that they do not make US $500 bills any more.
Modern US bills are printed on a special paper made from a blend of 75% cotton and 25% linen.
Its because they were all white and white people get everything jux cause they can do it
No. Despite many Internet conspiracy rumors claiming otherwise, US bills do not have magnetic ink, bar codes, or RFID chips. Modern bills $5 and higher DO have special strips that glow under UV light and watermarks, and bills $10 and higher have special inks that change color when you tilt the bill.
There aren't any US bills dated 1936. The special HAWAII-overprint bills issued during WWII all carry a 1935 date. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1935 A US 1 dollar bill with HAWAII on it?"
Benjamin Franklin is on the front of the US $100 billThe $100 bill (Franklin) and $10 bill (Hamilton) are the only current US bills that carry pictures of people who never served as a US president.Benjamin Franklin.
US bills are printed on a special paper made from linen and cotton, as opposed to normal paper which is made from cellulose.
The back of the United States ten dollar bill has a picture of the U.S. Treasury building in Washington, DC Note that all US bills have captions identifying their pictures and portraits.
No US paper money has silver IN it; all bills are printed on special paper that's mostly cotton and linen. If you're asking if the bills were silver certificates - i.e. could be traded for silver at that time - the answer is again no. All 1950 $10 bills were issued as familiar green-seal Federal Reserve Notes.
Not who, but what. Andrew Jackson is on the front and on the back is the White HouseThere are labels at the bottom of the pictures on all U.S. bills so you can just look at them for your answers.