There are 12 bills of American currency.
The $1 bill features George Washington (also on the quarter).
The $2 bill features the face of Thomas Jefferson (also on the nickel).
The $5 bill features Abraham Lincoln (also on the penny).
The $10 bill features the face of the first US Secretary of the Treasury, Alexander Hamilton.
The $20 bill features the face of Andrew Jackson (also on the $1 coin).
President Ulysses S. Grant adorns the $50 bill.
Benjamin Franklin is on the $100 bill. He was a Founding Father, diplomat, and the first US Postmaster General.
The following bills are no longer produced:
The $500 bill features the face of William McKinley.
The face on the $1,000 bill is Grover Cleveland.
The $5,000 bill features the face of James Madison.
The $10,000 bill features Salmon P. Chase, the sixth Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.
The following bill was only printed for intra-governmental use:
The $100,000 bill features Woodrow Wilson.
== == George Washington's picture is on the $1 bill. His name is right there in the caption underneath his portrait, the same as on all U.S. bills.
Ben Franklin! These $100.00 Bills are affectionately know as "Benjamin's"!!
All current US bills feature the signatures of the Secretary of the Treasury and US Treasurer in office at the time the bill's "series" was started. The "series" is identified by the bill's date and what letter if any is next to the date. A new date is used when a new Secretary of the Treasury takes office. A new letter is used when a new US Treasurer takes office. It can be confusing. You have to know what series bill you have to determine whose signatures it will carry, but all bills within a specific series for a specific denomination will have the same signatures. However, different denominations may have different series so you need all three - date, letter, and denomination - to know whose signatures will be shown.
If you mean whose PORTRAIT is on the bill, the Series 1928 and 1934 bills carried a picture of President William McKinley. Those were the last $500 bills printed in the US.
The first federally-issued $1 bills had a picture of Salmon P. Chase, Abraham Lincoln's Secretary of the Treasury.
A portrait of Alexander Hamilton, the first Secretary of the Treasury, has appeared on all US $10 bills since 1928.
All US bills have captions on them identifying the person whose portrait is on the front and the building or scene shown on the back. If you look through the bills in your wallet you'll find that the Treasury building is shown on the reverse of the $10 bill.
While there has been some (VERY) occasional speculation about issuing $200 bills, the US has never printed any bills with that denomination.
There's no 2005 $500 bill. The last high-denomination US bills were printed in 1945 and all carried a 1934 series date.
== == George Washington's picture is on the $1 bill. His name is right there in the caption underneath his portrait, the same as on all U.S. bills.
George Washington, the first President. Note that all modern US bills have captions on both sides that will tell you the name of the person on the front and the scene shown on the back.
Ulysses S. Grant.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!
All U.S. bills currently in circulation are the same size.
All US bills carry the signatures of the Secretary of the Treasury and US Treasurer who were in office when the bill's series was first printed. As of 02/2012, the Secretary of the Treasury is Timothy Geithner and the Treasurer is Rosie Rios.
Ben Franklin! These $100.00 Bills are affectionately know as "Benjamin's"!!
Washington's portrait has been on all US $1 bills issued since the early 20th century.
President Andrew Jackson. 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!