why Benjamin Franklin is featured on the obverse of one hundred dollar bill?

Ben Franklin

why Benjamin Franklin is featured on the obverse of one hundred dollar bill?
Is he more important than the other presidents?

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  • steddy voter  On August 26, 2010 at 8:59 am

    Ben Franklin was never president. He was a key figure – if not THE most prominent -in the development of the US, the Declaration of Independence & Constitution, a great orator, a diplomat, inventor, scientist, philosopher, and philanthropist.

  • Wonka  On August 26, 2010 at 8:59 am

    He was a founding father, not a president.
    He was also a freemason and a scientist.
    So we honor his contributions buy using his likeness.
    $100 sounds good to me.

  • Avner Eliyahu R  On August 26, 2010 at 8:59 am

    He wasn’t a president, but he persuaded French politicians to send troops to help the US in the Revolutionary War.

  • bigjohn B  On August 26, 2010 at 8:59 am

    Congress decided to put him there. At the time a One Hundred Dollar bill was seldom seen.

  • jim_elkins  On August 26, 2010 at 8:59 am

    This is a trick question, y’all.

    ADJECTIVE: obverse

    Facing or turned toward the observer: the obverse side of a statue.
    Serving as a counterpart or complement.

    Why doesn’t vincentvitojones state the question as "Why is Franklin’s picture on the front of the $100.00 bill?"

    If you are looking at the BACK of a Cnote – that is ALSO the OBVERSE side.

  • S D Modiano  On August 26, 2010 at 8:59 am

    If George Washington was the "father" of the US, Benjamin Franklin is the "grandfather" because he paved the way for the others to follow. He was America’s first "self-made" man who started with nothing more than the clothes in his back and rose to become one of the most famous men in the world because of his journalistic, scientific, diplomatic, political, philosophical, and entrepreneurial achievements and contributions to the betterment of humankind. He was able to retire around age 40 to pursure whatever interests he fancied and enjoyed audiences with European royalty in an era in which that was virtually unthinkable for "common folk" which was were he came from. He is the only Founding Father whose signature appears on ALL three Charters of Freedom.

    So, yes, he deserves to be on our highest denomination of currency because he was THE MAN!

    p/s "obverse" is a term generally used by numismatists to describe the side of a coin which features a human likeness but can be easily used by currency collectors as well

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