On currently circulating US federal reserve notes:
Washington is on the $1
Jefferson is on the $2
Lincoln is on the $5
Jackson is on the $20
Grant is on the $50
Previous issues contained many different presidents
Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, Jackson and Grant currently appear on bills (as do Hamilton and Franklin, neither of whom were actually presidents). It may be a little misleading to say that Jefferson is on a "current" bill... while the treasury regards the $2 bill as a current denomination and would happily print up a batch of them if demand required it, the last time any actually needed to be printed was in 2003.
The situation with coins is a little more difficult, because the Presidential $1 coin series means the answer is "all of them, eventually." For 2010, those featured on the dollar coin are Lincoln, Buchanan, Pierce, and Fillmore. Smaller denominations feature Lincoln, Jefferson, F. Roosevelt, and Kennedy.
The faces on current bills in the United States are: $1 - George Washington, 1st President of the United States $2 - Thomas Jefferson, 3rd President $5 - Abraham Lincoln, 16th President $10 - Alexander Hamilton, 1st Secretary of the Treasury $20 - Andrew Jackson, 7th President $50 - Ulysses S. Grant, 18th President $100 - Benjamin Franklin, Diplomat and Signatory of the Declaration of Independence
$1 is George Washington
$2 is Thomas Jefferson (and yes there is a circulating $2 bill)
$5 is Abraham Lincoln
$10 is Alexander Hamilton (not a president, but the first Secretary of the Treasury)
$20 is Andrew Jackson
$50 is Ulysses S. Grant
And $100 is Benjamin Franklin (also never a president)
No US President is featured on the 100 dollar bill. Benjamin Franklin, one of the Founding Fathers of the USA and one of the most famous Americans to impact the world, is featured on the 100 dollar bill. This is the largest denomination which is currently issued in the US. Benjamin Franklin’s image was first used in 1914 and the note was redesigned in 1996. Benjamin Franklin is known as an elder statesman and is the oldest revolutionary. He was responsible for the Declaration of Independence which he signed in 1776. He is often referred to as Mr. Electricity for his work and inventions of the lightning rod and Franklin stove, to name a few.
Portrait ; Design on back
$1 George Washington ; ONE between obverse and reverse of Great Seal of U.S.
$2 Thomas Jefferson ; Monticello (bills up till 1963), "The Signing of the Declaration of Independence" (1976-)
$5 Abraham Lincoln ; Lincoln Memorial
$10 Alexander Hamilton* ; U.S. Treasury Building
$20 Andrew Jackson ; White House
$50 Ulysses S. Grant ; U.S. Capitol
$100 Benjamin Franklin* ; Independence Hall
The following bills are no longer in use:
$500 William McKinley ; Ornate FIVE HUNDRED
$1,000 Grover Cleveland ; Ornate ONE THOUSAND
$5,000 James Madison ; Ornate FIVE THOUSAND
$10,000 Salmon P. Chase* ; Ornate TEN THOUSAND
$100,000 Woodrow Wilson ; Ornate ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND
You can see a list at:
http: // www . infoplease . com/ipa/A0001740.html
* Not all the denominations show Presidents.
Hamilton was Secretary of the Treasury.
Franklin, among other things, served as the first Postmaster General.
Chase was a Supreme Court justice.
George Washington is on the US one-dollar bill.
George Washington is on the one dollar bill.
Washington is on the one dollar bill, Eisenhower was on the silver dollar in the 1970s, and so far presidents Washington through Garfield are on the modern dollar coins.
George Washington
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.
Andrew Jackson is on the 20 and on the 50 is Ulysses S. Grant
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.
Both five dollar bills and fifty dollar bills are considered legal tender in the United States, they are issued by the US Treasury and can be used for purchasing goods and services. Additionally, both bills feature portraits of Presidents (Abraham Lincoln on the five dollar bill and Ulysses S. Grant on the fifty dollar bill).
The $10 and $100 bills do not feature Presidents. The $10 has Alexander Hamilton, who was the first US Secretary of the Treasury, and the $100 has Benjamin Franklin.
Three dollar bills exist but they were never issued by the US government, although the US issued a three dollar coin from 1854 to 1889. Earlier, some colonies printed three dollar bills. When banks were allowed to print money in the early days of the US, some printed legitimate, legal three dollar bills. The Confederacy also produced three dollar bills.
The presidents represent a national icon of the United States.
No. US one dollar bills were not made in 1950.
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
George Washington is on the US Dollar bill, the dollar coin has different presidents.
Current bills:$10 - Alexander Hamilton, the first Secretary of the Treasury $100 - Benjamin Franklin, inventor, diplomat, and one of the Founding Fathers.Obsolete bills:$10,000 - Salmon P. Chase, Secretary of the Treasury (1861-1864)