The federal agency responsible for printing the seven denominations, however, was planning to reintroduce a woman to a U.S. The few that still exist are legal to spend but are so rare that they are worth more than their face value to collectors. The Treasury stopped printing the larger notes in 1945, but most continued to circulate until 1969 when the Federal Reserve began destroying those that were received by banks. The faces on larger denominations that are out of circulation-the $500, $1,000, $5,000, $10,000, and $100,000 bills-are also those of men who served as president and Treasury secretary. bill in circulation include five American presidents and two founding fathers.