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.
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.
Andrew Jackson is on the 20 and on the 50 is Ulysses S. Grant
He is on a dollar coin. His picture is on a presidential dollar gold coin. Note: This doesn't contain any gold.
The size of any picture in pixels depends on how the picture is taken. You can take the picture to have as many or as few pixels as you want.
The front (obverse) of a US $10 bill shows a picture of Alexander Hamilton, the first Secretary of the Treasury. Hamilton is one of only two non-presidents on current US bills; the other is Benjamin Franklin on the $100 bill. The back (reverse) shows the US Treasury Building. Note that all current American bills have captions on them identifying the person pictured on the front and the scene or building on the back.
While there has been some (VERY) occasional speculation about issuing $200 bills, the US has never printed any bills with that denomination.
Among currently circulating US currency, the only bills that do not have portraits of former Presidents on the front are the $10 bill (Alexander Hamilton, 1st Secretary of the Treasury) and the $100 bill (Benjamin Franklin, Diplomat and Signer of the Declaration of Independence). The $1, $2, $5, $20 and $50 bills all have portraits of former presidents.
The individuals who are on the US bills usually have contributed greatly to the American way of life. Most were founding fathers or presidents.
The back of US $100 bills features a picture of Independence Hall, in Philadelphia.
No, because the US didn't print any bills with that date.
Alexander Hamilton, first Treasury Secretary ($10) and Benjamin Franklin, founding father, ($100)
the presidents