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- Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865) is the only U.S. president who was also a licensed
bartender. He was co-owner of Berry and Lincoln, a saloon in Springfield,
Illinois.b
- The only president to be unanimously elected was George Washington (1732-1799).
He also refused to accept his presidential salary, which was $25,000 a year.b
- Because the KKK was a powerful political force, Truman was encouraged to join the organization. According to some accounts, he was inducted, though he was “never active.” Other accounts claim that though he gave the KKK a $10 membership fee, he demanded it back and was never inducted or initiated.f, i
- Grover Cleveland was the only president in history to hold the job of a
hangman. He was once the sheriff of Erie County, New York, and twice had
to spring the trap at a hanging.k
- The “S” in Harry S Truman doesn’t stand for anything;
therefore, there is no period after his middle initial.j
- Lincoln Logs are named after Abraham Lincoln and the log cabin where he
was born. John Lloyd Wright, son of famous architect Francis Lloyd Wright,
invented them.k
- Thomas Jefferson and John Adams once traveled to Stratford-upon-Avon to
visit Shakespeare’s birthplace. While there, they took a knife to one
of Shakespeare’s chairs so they could take home some wood chips as
souvenirs.i
- James Madison and Thomas Jefferson were once arrested together for taking
a carriage ride in the countryside of Vermont on a Sunday, which violated
the laws of that state.i
- Andrew Johnson is the only tailor ever to be president. As president, he
would typically stop by a tailor shop to say hello. He would wear only the
suits that he made himself.a
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| Teddy Bears are named after U.S. President, Teddy Roosevelt |
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- “Teddy Bears” were so named when Theodore “Teddy” Roosevelt
(1858-1919) refused to shoot a small bear cub one day. The incident
was reported in the news, which inspired a toy manufacture to come out with
the cute stuffed animals.a
- George Washington never lived in the White House. The capital was actually
located in Philadelphia and other cities when Washington was president. He
is also the only president who didn’t represent a political party.b
- James Abram Garfield (1831-1881) is the first president to ever talk on
the phone. When he spoke to Alexander Graham Bell, who was at the other end
13 miles away, he said: “Please speak a little more slowly.”k
- Twenty-ninth president Warren Gamaliel Harding (1865-1923) repeatedly made
love to a young girl, Nan Britton, in a White House closet. On one occasion,
Secret Service agents had to stop his wife from beating down the closet door.e
- Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826) was the first president to be inaugurated
in Washington, D.C.h
- After President Bush Sr. vomited on the Japanese Prime Minister, a new
word entered the Japanese language. Bushusuru means “to do
the Bush thing,” or to publicly vomit.k
- The term “O.K.” derives from President Martin Van Buren
(1782-1862) who was known as “Old Kinderhook” because he was
raised in Kinderhook, New York. “O.K.” clubs were created
to support Van Buren’s campaigns.k
- President Grover Cleveland (1837-1908) is the only president to be elected
to two nonconsecutive terms. He was the 22nd and 24th president.j
- John Fitzgerald Kennedy’s (1917-1963) famous inaugural line “Ask
not what you your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country” echoes
similar directives made by many others, including Cicero, Oliver Wendell
Holmes Jr. and President Warren G. Harding, who told the 1916 Republican
convention: “We must have a citizenship less concerned about what the
government can do for it, and more anxious about what it can do for the nation.”k
- Martin Van Buren was the first to be a United States citizen. All previous
presidents were born British subjects.g
- Six presidents were named James: Madison, Monroe, Polk, Buchanan, Garfield,
and Carter.k
- President Dwight David Eisenhower (1890-1969) was the only president to
serve in both WWI and WWII.h
- Richard Milhous Nixon (1913-1994) was the first president to visit all 50
states and the first to visit China. He is the only president to resign.j
- James Earl “Jimmy” Carter (1924-) was the first president
to be born in a hospital.k
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| Jimmy Carter is the first president to report seeing a UFO |
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- Jimmy Carter is the first known president to go on record as seeing a UFO.k
- George H. W. Bush (1924-) was the first serving vice president to be elected president
since Martin Van Buren.k
- William Jefferson “Bill” Clinton (1946-) was the first U.S.
Democratic president to win re-election since FDR.k
- Abraham Lincoln was the only presidential candidate who was not a Mason in the 1860 election.i
- President James Buchanan (1791-1868) quietly but consistently bought slaves
in Washington, D.C., and then set them free in Pennsylvania.g
- Herbert Clark Hoover (1874-1964) gave his White House servants strict orders
to hide from him whenever he passed by. Those who failed to do so were at
risk of being fired.g
- Lyndon Baines Johnson “LBJ”(1908-1973) affectionately called
the many women he slept with his “harem.” He even had a buzzer
system installed that rang inside the Oval Office so that Secret Service
could warn him when his wife was coming.c
- James Buchanan is the only bachelor president. He was virtually inseparable
from William R. King (1786-1853), a senator from Alabama, earning the pair
the nickname “Miss Nancy and Aunt Fancy” and “Mr. Buchanan
and his wife.”c
- Ulysses S. Grant (born Hiram Ulysses Grant, 1822-1885) smoked at least
20 cigars a day and, after a brilliant war victory, a nation of well wishers
sent him more than 10,000 cigars. He later died of throat cancer.i
- Dwight D. Eisenhower had an affair with his wartime driver, Kay Summersby
(1908-1975). Kay later wrote a book called Past Forgetting: My Love Affair
with Dwight D. Eisenhower in which she claims he was impotent.e
- John F. “Jack” Kennedy most likely had the most active
extramarital sex life of any president. He allegedly slept with Marilyn Monroe,
Jayne Mansfield, Audrey Hepburn, Angie Dickinson, stripper Blaze Starr, Marlene
Dietrich, and many other women including White House staffers, secretaries,
stewardess, campaign workers, strippers, and acquaintances of trusted male
friends. The FBI taped sounds of him and Inga Arvad making love.d
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| Teddy Roosevelt and his family could walk in stilts |
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- Every member of Teddy Roosevelt’s family owned a pair of stilts,
including the first lady.k
- Sally Hemings (ca. 1773-1885) was not only Jefferson’s slave, but
also the half-sister of Jefferson’s dead wife. She is said to have
been Jefferson’s mistress for thirty-eight years, and scholars have
argued for years whether Jefferson was the father of her children. DNA tests
in 1998 revealed that a male in Jefferson’s line was the father of
at least one of her children, though it did not prove conclusively that Jefferson
himself fathered them.c
- When Martin Van Buren wrote his autobiography after serving as president
from 1837-1841, he didn’t mention his wife of 12 years. Not even once.i
- John Tyler (1790-1862) had more children than any other president. He had
eight by his first wife and seven by his second. He was 70 when his last
child, Pearl, was born. He was also the first president to get married in
office, though his eight children form his first wife did not approve of the
wedding and did not attend.j
- Ronald Wilson Reagan (1911-2004) won the Most Nearly Perfect Male Figure
Award from the University of California in 1940.k
- Thomas Jefferson had a family of plants named after him, Jeffersonia
diphylla, which is also known as twin root or rheumatism root.k
- Thomas Jefferson wrote “The Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth,” which
was discovered after his death by his daughter. It argues that Jesus Christ
was a great thinker, but that he was devoid of other worldly qualities that
made him the center of Christianity.k
- James Madison (1751-1836) was the shortest president of the United States,
standing at only 5’4”. He never weighed more than 100 pounds.j
- George Washington made the shortest inauguration speech on record—133
words and less than two minutes long.b
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| William Harrison served the shortest term of any president |
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- William Henry Harrison (1773-1841) holds the record for the longest inauguration
speech in history at 8,578 words long and one hour and 40 minutes. Unfortunately,
he gave the speech during bad weather and a month later, he was dead from
pneumonia, making his the shortest presidency on record.j
- George Washington, James Monroe, Andrew Jackson, James Polk, James Buchanan,
Andrew Johnson, James Garfield, William McKinley, Theodore Roosevelt, William
Taft, Warren Harding, Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman, Lyndon Johnson, and
Gerald Ford were all Masons, many symbols of which are found on American
currency.i
- The body of John Scott Harrison, father of President of Benjamin Harrison,
was stolen by grave robbers and sold to Ohio Medical College in Cincinnati
for use as a training cadaver. The body was eventually recovered and reburied.k
- Gerald Rudolph Ford’s (1913-2006) name before he was adopted was
Leslie Lynch King Jr.g
- The youngest president was Teddy Roosevelt who became president at age
42 when McKinley (1843-1901) was assassinated. JFK was the youngest president elected at
the age of 43.j
- As a young man, Rutherford Birchard Hayes (1822-1893) fought lyssophobia,
or the fear of going insane.k
- Three presidents died on July 4th: Thomas Jefferson (1826), John Adams
(1826), and James Monroe (1831). Calvin Coolidge is the only president to
have been born on the Fourth (1872).h
- George Herbert Walker Bush is the only President with four names.k
- James Garfield could write Latin with one hand and Greek with the other
hand simultaneously.i
- The three best known Western names in China are Jesus Christ, Elvis Presley,
and Richard Nixon.k
- John Quincy Adams (1767-1848) would often skinny dip in the Potomac River.i
- James Monroe (1758-1831) once chased his Secretary of State from the White
House with a pair of fire tongs.i
- When Mexican general Santa Ana demanded Zachary Taylor (“Old Rough
and Ready,” 1784-1850) to surrender, Taylor said, “Tell
him to go to hell.”i
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| Andrew Jackson was involved in over 100 duels and fights |
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- Andrew Jackson (1767-1845) was reportedly involved in over 100 duels, most
to defend the honor of his wife, Rachel. He had a bullet in his chest from
an 1806 duel and another bullet in his arm from a barroom fight in 1813 with
Missouri senator Thomas Hart Benton.g
- Herbert Hoover was an orphan whose first job was picking bugs off potato
plants, for which he was paid a dollar per hundred bugs. He also was a mine
worker.b
- Gerald Ford worked as a model during college. He also worked as a forest
ranger at Yellowstone National Park directing traffic and feeding the bears.a
- In 1945, Congress voted to commemorate the work FDR did for the March of
Dimes by putting his profile on the coin.i
- Abraham Lincoln was the first president to ever be photographed at his
inauguration. In the photo, he is standing near John Wilkes Booth,
his future assassin.k
- Robert Lincoln is the only man in U.S. history known to have witnessed
the assassinations of three different presidents, his father, James Garfield,
and William McKinley. After he saw anarchist Leon Czolgosz shoot McKinley,
he vowed he would never again appear in public with an incumbent president.i
- Much has been written about Lincoln-Kennedy assassinations coincidences,
including:
- Both had seven letters in their last names.
- Both were shot in the head on a Friday seated beside their wives.
- Lincoln was shot at Ford’s Theatre. Kennedy was shot in a Lincoln
Limo, which was made by Ford.
- Lincoln was in Box 7 at Ford’s Theatre, and Kennedy was in Car
7 of the Dallas motorcade.
- Both assassins had three names with 15 letters (John Wilkes Booth and
Lee Harvey Oswald).
- Booth shot Lincoln in a theater and was captured in a warehouse. Oswald
shot Kennedy in a warehouse and was captured in a theater.
- Both were elected to the U.S. House of Representatives for the first
time in ’46 (1846/1946), were runners-up for their party’s
nomination for vice president in ’56, and were elected president
in ’60.
- Both were succeeded by southern Democrats named Johnson.k
- An anarchist and lawyer named Charles Guiteau shot James Garfield in the
back with a five-barrel, .44-caliber pistol called a British Bulldog in 1881.
He said he chose the gun because it would look good on a display in a museum
someday. No one currently knows where the gun is.b
- The first attempt to assassinate a president was on Andrew Jackson by Richard
Lawrence, a house painter. Both of his guns misfired, however—an event
that statisticians say could occur only once in 125,000 times. Andrew Jackson
then chased Lawrence with his walking stick.j
- James Garfield didn’t die from the gunshot wounds from his assassin’s
gun; he died of blood poisoning after doctors and experts (including Alexander
Graham Bell) tried to remove the bullet from his back with their dirty fingers
and instruments, causing him to linger in pain for 80 days before dying.
His assassin, Charles Guiteau, later claimed that he didn’t kill the
president, the doctors had.i
- At 325 pounds, William Howard Taft (1857-1930), who was dubbed “Big
Bill,” was the largest president in American history and often got
stuck in the White House bathtub. His advisors had to sometimes pull him
out.b
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| Warren Harding once lost priceless White House China playing poker |
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- Harding was obsessed with poker and once bet an entire set of priceless
White House China and lost it.k
- During his second run for presidency, Teddy Roosevelt was shot by a would-be
assassin while giving a speech in Milwaukee. He continued to deliver his
speech with the bullet in his chest.i
- Thomas Jefferson was convinced that if he soaked his feet in a bucket of
cold water every day, he’d never get a cold.k
- Calvin Coolidge liked to have his head rubbed with petroleum jelly while
eating his breakfast in bed.b
- Woodrow Wilson (born Thomas Woodrow Wilson, 1856-1924) would paint his
golf balls black during the winter so he could continue playing in the snow.a
- On his epitaph, which he composed, Jefferson mentions that he was the author
of the Declaration of Independence and the Statuette of Virginia for Religious
Freedom and that he was the father of the University of Virginia. He neglected
to mention he had been the President of the United States.g
- Teddy Roosevelt’s last request before dying was “Please put
out the light.” Thomas Jefferson’s last words were “This
is the Fourth?” John Adam’s dying words were “Thomas Jefferson
still survives,” unaware that Jefferson had passed away a few hours
earlier.k
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| George Washington had to borrow $600 to get to his own inauguration |
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- George Washington didn’t have enough money to get to his own inauguration
so he had to borrow $600 from his neighbor.i
- Washington, Jackson, Van Buren, Taylor, Fillmore, Lincoln, A. Johnson,
Cleveland, and Truman did not attend college. Harry Truman is the only twentieth-century
president without a college degree.b
- The capital of Liberia is called Monrovia after President James Monroe.k
- In 1978, President Jimmy Carter, the first Southerner elected to the presidency
following the Civil War, restored U.S. citizenship to Jefferson Davis, president
of the Confederate States of America.i
- Samuel Mudd, the doctor who treated the broken ankle of Lincoln assassin John Wilkes Booth, received a presidential pardon in 1869 from Ulysses S. Grant.i
- No president has ever been an only child.j
- At his first inauguration, George Washington added the “so help me
God” to the end of the oath of office.b
- John Adams' campaign propaganda against Jefferson said that if Jefferson
was elected, “murder, robbery, rape, adultery, and incest will
be openly taught and practiced.” They later resolved their differences
and wrote many letters to each other.i
- It was so cold at Ulysses S. Grant’s presidential inauguration that
the canaries that were supposed to sing at the inaugural ball froze to death.k
- Every so often, Calvin Coolidge would press all the buttons on the President’s
desk and hide and watch his staff run in. He would then pop out from behind
the door and say that he was just seeing if everyone was working.b
- The first president to be born outside the original 13 States was Lincoln.k
- Jimmy Carter was a wealthy peanut farmer in Plains, Georgia. A farming accident left one of his fingers permanently bent.b
- William McKinley, Grover Cleveland, and James Madison are on the $500,
$1000, and $5000 bill, respectively. The bills are still used as legal tender
but are no longer being printed.b
- Abraham Lincoln is the only president to receive a patent (# 6469). He
was the first president to have a beard, at the request from a little girl
named Gracie Bedell. The first child to die in the White House was Abraham
Lincoln’s 12-year old son, Willie.i
- Abraham Lincoln was the tallest president at 6' 4” and weighing 180
pounds.i
- Several of his descendants and a few historians claim that John Hanson
(1721-1783) is actually the forgotten first president of the United States
because he was the first president under the Articles of Confederation.j
- William McKinley was the first to ride in a self-propelled vehicle—the
electric ambulance that took him to the hospital after he had been shot.k
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| Same-scaled bodies for the presidential heads would stand 465 feet tall |
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- The presidential faces on Mount Rushmore are as high as a five-story building,
about 60' from chin to top of the head. The pupils of eyes are 4' across
and the mouths are 18' wide. The carving took 14 years, from 1927-1941. The
total cost was about $990,000. A total 450,000 tons of stone was removed.b
- George Washington’s original ancestral name was de Wessyngton, from
a certain William de Hertburn, a twelfth-century noble knight of the manor
and village of Wessyngton who later changed his name to de Wessyngton (which
is the Norman spelling of Washington).i
- Woodrow Wilson was the first to show a motion picture in the White House: The
Birth of Nation, which has become the most banned film in American
history.k
- Warren Harding was the first president to own a radio, the first to make
speech over the radio, and the first to ride to his inauguration in a car.
When women got the right to vote, he was the first president they could elect.k
- JFK was the first Roman Catholic to be president, the first Boy Scout to
become president, and the first president to be born in the twentieth century.i
- Gerald Ford was the first person to be both vice president and president
without being elected by the people. He was appointed vice president when
Spiro Agnew resigned and he succeeded to the presidency when Nixon resigned.g
- Rutherford Hayes banished alcohol from the White House and held gospel
sing-alongs every night in the White House.k
- Andrew Johnson was the first president to be impeached. He was acquitted by one vote in the Senate. It would be another 131 years before another president, Bill Clinton, would be impeached.j
-- Posted November 30, 2009. Updated January 29, 2011.
References
a Boller, Paul F. Jr. 2007. Presidential Diversion: Presidents
at Play from George Washington to George W. Bush. Orlando, FL: Harcourt
Books. b Frank, Sid and Arden Davis Melick. 1977. The
Presidents: Tidbits and Trivia. New York, NY: Greenwich House. c Garrison,
Webb. 2000. Love, Lust, and Longing in the White House. Nashville,
TN: Cumberland House.
d Gregory, Leland H. 1999. Presidential
Indiscretions. New York, NY: Dell Publishing. e Hagood,
Wesley O. 1996. Presidential Sex: From the Founding Fathers
to Bill Clinton. Secaucus, NJ: Citadel Press.
f McCullough, David. 2003. Truman. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster.
g McPhereson,
James M., Ed. 2000. “To the Best of My Ability”:
The American Presidents. New York, NY: Dorling Kindersley
Publishing, Inc. h Nelson, Michael, Ed.
1998. The Presidency: A to Z. Washington D. C.:
Congressional Quarterly, Inc. i O’Brien,
Cormac. 2004. Secret Lives of the U.S. Presidents:
What Your Teachers Never Told You about the Men of the
White House. Philadelphia, PA: Quirk Books. j Smith,
Carter. 2004. Presidents: Every Question Answered.
Irvington, NY: Hylas Publishing. k Stebben,
Gregg and Jim Morris. 1998. White House Confidential:
The Little Book of Weird Presidential History.
Nashville, TN: Cumberland House Publishing.
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