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.
If by "dollar bill" you mean any denomination of currency and not just $1 bills, the answer is a definite Yes.
Among current bills, the $10 note carries a picture of Alexander Hamilton who was the first Secretary of the Treasury, and the $100 bill depicts statesman, inventor, philosopher, and Founding Father Benjamin Franklin.
Older bills no longer in use included the $10,000 denomination which carried a picture of Salmon P. Chase, Secretary of the Treasury from 1861 to 1864.
Before portraits and sizes were standardized in 1928, many earlier bills had portraits of people who weren't presidents
If you're referring to U.S. paper currency, then the answers are the $10, which has Alexander Hamilton, and the $100, which shows Benjamin Franklin.
Current bills with presidents:$1 George Washington$2 Thomas Jefferson$5 Abraham Lincoln$20 Andrew Jackson$50 Ulysses GrantCurrent bills with non-presidents:$10 Alexander Hamilton$100 Benjamin FranklinDiscontinued bills with presidents:$500 William McKinley$1,000 Grover Cleveland$5,000 James Madison$100,000 Woodrow Wilson (never publicly circulated)Discontinued bills with non-presidents:$10,000 Salmon P. Chase
About 25% throughtout the 20th century.
The first six U.S. Presidents vetoed a total of ten bills. Seven of them were vetoed by James Madison.
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.
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.
He can but he needs Congress to make that, since Congress makes laws they will have to vote yes and the president of course has the final say around, or they can outvote the presidents decline.
Yes, presidents sign the bills that they approve of, and that makes them laws.
He is not on any bills. He is on a one-dollar coin, a part of the Presidents, series.
The Bureau of Engraving and Printing has pages explaining the designs
yes they are on the penny and alot of other coins. also dollars bills woot woot
Andrew Jackson is on the 20 and on the 50 is Ulysses S. Grant
$1 George Washington $2 Thomas Jefferson $5 Abraham Lincoln $20 Andrew Jackson $50 Ulysses Grant This list only includes bills currently in production and circulation. Alexander Hamilton on the $10 and Benjamin Franklin on the $100 were never presidents.