A portrait of Abraham Lincoln, the 16th President of the United States, appears on the front of the US 1 cent piece.
If you are asking about the Canadian, Australian or New Zealand 1 cent piece or the British penny, the answer is Queen Elizabeth the Second.
Abraham Lincoln has been the person shown on the US one cent coin (the penny) since 1909. From 1793 through 1908 that coin did not show a "real" person, but had various depictions of "Miss Liberty"
Penny-Lincoln. Nickel-Jefferson. Dime-F. Roosevelt Quarter-Washington...
Abraham Lincoln
Abraham Lincoln
lincoln
A penny is 1/5 of a nickel, 1/10 of a dime, 1/25 of a quarter and 1/100 of a dollar. A nickel is 1/2 of a dime, 1/5 of a quarter and 1/20 of a dollar. A dime is 2/5 of a quarter and 1/10 of a dollar. A quarter is 1/4 of a dollar.
By far it is the penny.
Yes, you can make seventy-four cents with nine coins: quarter, quarter, dime, nickel, nickel, penny, penny, penny, penny
dime
A quarter, a nickel, a dime, and a penny is only 41 cents ... not enough to make 75 cents in even one way.
15.438 grams.
yes
Penny, nickel, dime, quarter, half dollar, dollar.
91/100 91%
The answer is three quarter's, one nickel's dime and a penny!
1%, 5%, 10%, 25% respectively.
Most of the faces on coins are important figures in history. Some of these figures are George Washington on the quarter, Abraham Lincoln on the penny, Thomas Jefferson on the nickel, Sacajawea on the gold dollar, and Franklin Roosevelt is on the dime.