Of the seven denominations of U.S. Federal Reserve Notes in common use today ($1, $2, $5, $10, $20, $50, and $100), how many different U.S. presidents are depicted?
Can you name them?
Hint # 1: This is a trick question.
Hint # 2: This is not the trick question you think it is,
Washington on front of $1
Jefferson on front and back of $2
John Adams on back of $2
Lincoln on front of $5, (also on the back as a statue if memory serves)
Jackson on front of $20
Grant on front of $50
Of course Franklin and Hamilton don’t count since they weren’t presidents
$1: Obverse: Washington
$2: Obverse: Jefferson
*Reverse: Jefferson again, Adams
$5: Obverse: Lincoln
*Reverse: Lincoln again (statue)
$10: Obverse: Alexander Hamilton: (not a prez)
$20: Obverse: Jackson
$50: Obverse: Grant
$100: Obverse: Ben Franklin (not a prez)
*Reverse: Washington (statue)
So for the seven notes there are five presidents depicted on the obverse, four on the reverse but three of those are duplicates so 6 different presidents between the five bills. Adams is the only one that appears only on the reverse.
Edit: I thought I was going to own you all with my numismatic knowledge, but I guess I forgot the caliber of brains here on the Dope.
Second Edit:
Summary
I appear to be the first person to remember that Washington is on the back of the $100 bill, as a statue in front of Independence Hall. Wh00T!
Per Wikipedia, the painting actually depicts the presentation of the Declaration to Congress before it was signed: " The painting is sometimes incorrectly described as depicting the signing of the Declaration of Independence. The painting shows the five-man drafting committee presenting their draft of the Declaration to the Congress, an event that took place on June 28, 1776, and not its signing, which took place mainly on August 2."
$3.0 billion of them in circulation as of 2022, so somewhat more rare than the $10 ($23.3 billion), but hardly non-existent. I doubt they are evenly distributed, so you probably see them more often where people use a lot of low-denomination cash. Benjamins are, of course, the most popular banknote, but $1’s are not that far behind.
Anything $500 or over is legitimately rare, I have never run across one (I am not a private detective or high-stakes poker player, though), and the one time I tried to get some the bank teller wouldn’t give me any and said the directive was to remove them from circulation.
I include $2 bills (among some others) whenever I send birthday cards to nieces or nephews. My late grandfather-in-law used to use them for day-to-day purchases like groceries.