answersLogoWhite

0

The One Dollar Bill features President George Washington.

Note that he died before cameras were invented, and the portrait is an engraving, not a photo.

User Avatar

Wiki User

16y ago

What else can I help you with?

Continue Learning about General History

Who is the first president pictured on the us one dollar coin?

George Washington


What former US president showed up on the dollar coins in 1971?

Eisenhower.


Is Franklin Pierce on a dollar bill?

He's considered a minor president and does not appear on any current bill. There is a one-dollar US coin with his likeness on it that is currently in circulation. It is part of an ongoing series that honors each president.


Which US president is on the $100 bill?

No president is featured on the front of the US $100 bill. It shows a picture of Benjamin Franklin.While Franklin was one of the most honored and prolific of the Founding Fathers (diplomat, inventor, co-author of the Constitution, essayist, and on and on) he never served as President. The slang name for $100 bills is "Benjamins."The back of the $100 bill shows a picture of Independence Hall in Philadelphia. If you look closely, there is a statue of George Washington in front of Independence Hall. So technically, George Washington appears on the $100 bill.Benjamin Franklin is on the US 100-dollar bill. He was never a president but probably would have been had he been younger when the US was formed.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.No president is on the 100 dollar bill in the United States. The person on the 100 dollar bill is Benjamin Franklin, who was never president.


What year was gold backing removed from the us dollar?

the time of the gold taken out of the us dollar was 1971MoreThe US went off the gold standard in stages. Use of gold in coins ended in 1933 when the government outlawed private ownership of gold and increased its controlled price as part of efforts to end the Great Depression. In 1971 President Nixon ended all controls on the metal's price, allowing it to float and ending its use as backing for the US dollar.