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President of the United States - Presidential facts |  | President of the United States - Presidential facts: Encyclopedia II - President of the United States - Presidential facts |  |
President of the United States - Transition events.
Four U.S. Presidents have been assassinated while in office:
Abraham Lincoln in 1865 by John Wilkes Booth
James Garfield in 1881 by Charles J. Guiteau (Guiteau shot him but Garfield arguably died due to subsequent incorrect medical care)
William McKinley in 1901 by Leon Czolgosz
John F. Kennedy in 1963, generally thought to be by Lee Harvey Oswald [1] although many theories suggest additional gunmen. [2]
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See also:President of the United States, President of the United States - Requirements to hold office, President of the United States - Election, President of the United States - Old system, President of the United States - Current system, President of the United States - Campaign, President of the United States - Terms of office, President of the United States - Succession, President of the United States - Powers, President of the United States - Presidential salary and benefits, President of the United States - Salary, President of the United States - Residences, President of the United States - Travelling, President of the United States - Secret Service, President of the United States - Office-holders, President of the United States - Timeline, President of the United States - Life after the Presidency, President of the United States - Presidential facts, President of the United States - Transition events, President of the United States - Other facts, President of the United States - Related topics, President of the United States - Notes |  | | President of the United States, President of the United States - Campaign, President of the United States - Current system, President of the United States - Election, President of the United States - Life after the Presidency, President of the United States - Notes, President of the United States - Office-holders, President of the United States - Old system, President of the United States - Other facts, President of the United States - Powers, President of the United States - Presidential facts, President of the United States - Presidential salary and benefits, President of the United States - Related topics, President of the United States - Requirements to hold office, President of the United States - Residences, President of the United States - Salary, President of the United States - Secret Service, President of the United States - Succession, President of the United States - Terms of office, President of the United States - Timeline, President of the United States - Transition events, President of the United States - Travelling |  | |
|  |  | President of the United States: Encyclopedia II - President of the United States - Presidential facts
President of the United States - Presidential facts
President of the United States - Transition events
- Four U.S. Presidents have been assassinated while in office:
- Abraham Lincoln in 1865 by John Wilkes Booth
- James Garfield in 1881 by Charles J. Guiteau (Guiteau shot him but Garfield arguably died due to subsequent incorrect medical care)
- William McKinley in 1901 by Leon Czolgosz
- John F. Kennedy in 1963, generally thought to be by Lee Harvey Oswald [1] although many theories suggest additional gunmen. [2]
- Four others died in office of natural causes:
- William Henry Harrison, died of pneumonia in 1841
- Zachary Taylor, died of "acute indigestion" in 1850. Taylor's body was exhumed in 1991 to test if he had died of arsenic poisoning. It was determined he did not.
- Warren G. Harding, died of heart attack in 1923
- Franklin D. Roosevelt, died of cerebral hemorrhage in 1945
- One President resigned from office:
- Two Presidents have been impeached, though neither was subsequently convicted:
- Andrew Johnson in 1868
- Bill Clinton in 1999
- Four Presidents have been elected without a plurality of popular votes:
- John Quincy Adams - trailed Andrew Jackson by 44,804 votes in the 1824 election
- However, in six of the then twenty-four states in 1824, the electors were chosen by the state legislature, with no popular vote.
- Rutherford B. Hayes - trailed Samuel J. Tilden by 264,292 votes in the 1876 election
- Benjamin Harrison - trailed Grover Cleveland 95,713 votes in the 1888 election
- George W. Bush - trailed Al Gore by 543,895 votes in the 2000 election (http://www.fec.gov/pubrec/2000presgeresults.htm)
- A possible addition to this list is John F. Kennedy, who may have trailed Richard Nixon in the 1960 election. The precise gap in votes is difficult to determine because voters in Alabama were not given Kennedy as an option on their ballot - they could only vote "Democratic", without choosing a candidate. So, when the Democrats won Alabama, half of the state's electoral votes were pledged to Kennedy, and the other half were not pledged at all, and those votes all went to Harry F. Byrd. So it is impossible to know how many of those voters meant to vote for Kennedy, or for Byrd. The margin between Kennedy and Nixon was smaller than the number of Democratic votes in Alabama. The official figure from the U.S. government states includes the Alabama votes in Kennedy's total, giving Kennedy the popular plurality.
- Eleven Presidents have been elected fourteen times without a majority of popular votes (but with a plurality of popular votes):
- James K. Polk - 49.3% of the popular vote in the 1844 election
- Zachary Taylor - 47.3% of the popular vote in the 1848 election
- James Buchanan - 45.3% of the popular vote in the 1856 election
- Abraham Lincoln - 39.9% of the popular vote in the 1860 election
- James A. Garfield - 48.3% of the popular vote in the 1880 election
- Grover Cleveland - 48.8% of the popular vote in the 1884 election
- Grover Cleveland - 46.0% of the popular vote in the 1892 election
- Woodrow Wilson - 41.8% of the popular vote in the 1912 election
- Woodrow Wilson - 49.3% of the popular vote in the 1916 election
- Harry S. Truman - 49.7% of the popular vote in the 1948 election
- John F. Kennedy - 49.7% of the popular vote in the 1960 election
- Richard Nixon - 43.2% of the popular vote in the 1968 election
- Bill Clinton - 42.9% of the popular vote in the 1992 election
- Bill Clinton - 49.2% of the popular vote in the 1996 election
- Two Presidents have been elected without a majority of electoral votes, and were chosen by the House of Representatives:
- Thomas Jefferson - finished with same number of electoral votes as Aaron Burr in the 1800 election
- John Quincy Adams - trailed Andrew Jackson by 15 electoral votes in the 1824 election
- Eight Presidents took office without being elected to the Presidency, having been elected as Vice Presidents and then promoted from that position:
- Four of them did not run to succeed themselves, and were never elected president.
- John Tyler - Assumed the Presidency on the death of William Henry Harrison, did not run in the 1844 election
- Millard Fillmore - Succeeded Zachary Taylor, did not run in the 1852 election
- Fillmore did run for President in the 1856 election as a Know Nothing Party candidate and received 873,053 votes (21.6%), finishing third
- Andrew Johnson - Succeeded Abraham Lincoln, did not run in the 1868 election
- Chester A. Arthur - Succeeded James Garfield, did not run in the 1884 election
- The other four later ran for president, and were elected to succeed themselves as president:
- Theodore Roosevelt - Succeeded William McKinley, elected to succeed himself as president in the 1904 election
- Calvin Coolidge - Succeeded Warren G. Harding, elected to succeed himself as president in the 1924 election
- Harry S. Truman - Succeeded Franklin D. Roosevelt, elected to succeed himself as president in the 1948 election, but did not run again in the 1952 election, despite being eligible for a third term.
- Lyndon B. Johnson - Succeeded John F. Kennedy, elected to succeed himself as president in the 1964 election, but did not run again in the 1968 election
- One President, Gerald Ford, was never elected but was appointed Vice President by Richard Nixon (with approval from Congress) upon the resignation of Vice President Spiro Agnew, succeeded to the Presidency after Nixon's resignation, and was defeated in the 1976 election by Jimmy Carter. He remains the only President neither elected as President nor as Vice President.
- There were four cases in which only one person served in a presidential term, but that person did not serve for a full 1461 days.
- Although the first presidential term was deemed to have started on March 4, 1789 — the day that the United States Constitution became operational — the First Congress did not meet to count the electoral vote until April 6, and thus George Washington did not accede to the office until then, giving him 1427 days and some number of hours.
- Franklin D. Roosevelt's first term began March 4, 1933, but the twentieth amendment changed the start of the next term to noon on January 20, 1937, giving Roosevelt a first term of 1418.5 days.
- Due to the properties of the Gregorian calendar, 1800 and 1900 were not leap years, so John Adams' term and William McKinley's first term were shortened to 1460 days.
- Five Presidents had never held any prior elected office:
- Zachary Taylor
- Ulysses S. Grant
- Herbert Hoover
- Dwight D. Eisenhower
- William Howard Taft
- An urban legend claims that David Rice Atchison was the 11½th president of the United States for one day on March 4, 1849 in between the terms of James K. Polk (whose term expired at noon on March 4) and Zachary Taylor (who chose not to be sworn in until March 5). However, the logic of this is contradictory. If one does not consider Taylor to have officially become President until the administration of his Oath of Office, then the same logic precludes any person from having automatically succeeded before likewise having taken the same Oath. In fact, Taylor, as President-elect, automatically acceded to the Office of President upon the expiration of Polk's term, even if he did not yet enter into the execution of that Office until the Oath was administered. This fact was confirmed by Congress when it certified his election, as it defined the beginning of the administration as the instant Polk left office. Even if supposing, for the sake of argument, the rather odd interpretation that only Presidents-elect are required to take the Oath before officially occupying the Office, whilst officials in the Presidential Line of Succession occupy the Presidency ipso facto, then there would be a long list of dozens of additional "Presidents" who only held the office for a matter of hours or minutes.
- Grover Cleveland had two non-consecutive terms as President, and is counted both as the 22nd and the 24th President, as can be confirmed from the list of Presidents of the United States. Consequently, all subsequent Presidents who are referred to as "the nth President of the United States" are actually the (n − 1)th person to hold the office. E.g., George W. Bush, 43rd President, is actually the 42nd person to be President.
- The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court did not administer the initial oath of office to seven presidents[3]. Robert Livingston, as Chancellor of the State of New York, administered the oath of office to George Washington at his first inauguration; William Cushing, an associate justice of the Supreme Court, administered the second. Calvin Coolidge's father, a notary public, administered the oath to his son after the death of Warren Harding[4]. United States District Court Judge Sarah T. Hughes administered the oath to Lyndon Johnson after the assassination of John F. Kennedy. John Tyler, Millard Fillmore, Chester A. Arthur, and Theodore Roosevelt's initial oaths reflected the unexpected nature of their taking office.
President of the United States - Other facts
- All presidents have been white males and nominally Christian (mostly Protestant). Most presidents have been of substantially British descent, but there have been a few who came from a different background:
- Predominantly Dutch: Martin Van Buren
- Although Theodore Roosevelt and Franklin D. Roosevelt had Dutch names, neither was predominantly Dutch; each had only one Dutch grandfather. Theodore's other three grandparents were all British; Franklin's other three grandparents were of Puritan stock.
- Predominantly German: Herbert Hoover and Dwight Eisenhower
- Predominantly Irish:William McKinley, John F. Kennedy, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton
- Kennedy was also America's only Roman Catholic president.
- Only one president, James Buchanan, remained a bachelor. Bachelor Grover Cleveland married Frances Folsom while in office, while both John Tyler and Woodrow Wilson became widowers and remarried while in office.
- Historical rankings of U.S. Presidents by academic historians usually regard three Presidents — in chronological order, George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, and Franklin D. Roosevelt — to be the three most successful presidents by a wide margin.
- The Secret Service and some agencies in the government use acronyms as jargon. Since the Truman Administration the President of the United States has been called POTUS, pronounced "poh-tuss". The wife of the President, traditionally referred to as the First Lady is called FLOTUS, pronounced "flo-tuss". The Vice President of the United States is often abbreviated to VPOTUS, pronounced "vee-poh-tuss".
- The President is known to be able to affect trends in popular culture. An endorsement of a book or a movie by a president can easily launch the career of a author or a filmmaker. For example, Ronald Reagan's admiration of The Hunt For Red October may have helped to cause Tom Clancy to become a nationally acclaimed bestselling author, something that may never have happened had it not been for Reagan's endorsement.
Other related archives1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, 17 November, 1732, 1782, 1784, 1789, 1790, 1797, 1799, 1800, 1800 election, 1800s, 1801, 1804, 1810s, 1824 election, 1826, 1841, 1844 election, 1848 election, 1849, 1850, 1852 election, 1856 election, 1860 election, 1861, 1862, 1865, 1868, 1868 election, 1875, 1876 election, 1877, 1880 election, 1881, 1884 election, 1885, 1888 election, 1892 election, 1900, 1901, 1904 election, 1908, 1909, 1912 election, 1916 election, 1917, 1919, 1923, 1924, 1924 election, 1930s, 1933, 1937, 1945, 1946, 1948 election, 1950s, 1951, 1952 election, 1953, 1958, 1960 election, 1963, 1964, 1964 election, 1968 election, 1973, 1974, 1976 election, 1980s, 1991, 1992 election, 1993, 1994, 1996 election, 1997, 1999, 19th century, 2000 election, 2001, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2009, 25th amendment, Aaron Burr, Abraham Lincoln, Acting President, Air Force One, Al Gore, Alabama, Amendment XII, Amendment XXII, American Civil War, Andrew Jackson, Andrew Johnson, April 22, April 30, April 6, April 9, Army One, Article II, August 19, August 27, August 9, Benjamin Harrison, Bill Clinton, Boeing 747s, British, British subject, Cadillac, Calvin Coolidge, Camp David, Charles J. Guiteau, Chester A. Arthur, Chief Justice, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, Chief Justice of the United States, Christian, Clinton Administration, Coast Guard One, Cold War, Commander-in-Chief, David Rice Atchison, December 14, December 5, Declaration of Independence, Democrats, Dutch, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Dwight Eisenhower, Election Day, Electoral College, Executive One, Executive branch, Executive privilege, Fiction regarding United States presidential succession, First Lady, First U.S. Congress, Ford, Frances Folsom, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Franklin D. Roosevelt's, Franklin Pierce, Franklin Roosevelt, G.W. Bush Administration, George H. W. Bush, George W. Bush, George Washington, Gerald Ford, German, Gregorian calendar, Grover Cleveland, Harry F. Byrd, Harry S. Truman, Herbert Hoover, Historical rankings of U.S. Presidents, House of Representatives, Hurricane Katrina, Irish, James A. Garfield, James Buchanan, James Garfield, James K. Polk, January 18, January 20, January 22, January 5, January 7, Jimmy Carter, John Adams, John Adams', John F. Kennedy, John Quincy Adams, John Tyler, John Wilkes Booth, July 31, July 4, July 6, June 12, June 15, June 2004, June 24, June 5, Know Nothing Party, Lee Harvey Oswald, Leon Czolgosz, Library of Congress, Lincoln Administration, List of Presidents of the United States, List of actors who played President of the United States, Lyndon B. Johnson, Lyndon Johnson, March 29, March 3, March 4, March 5, Marine One, Martin Van Buren, Maryland, May 29, Millard Fillmore, NW, National Archives and Records Administration, Navy One, Nixon, November 2, November 23, November 24, October 1, Powers of the President of the United States, President, President of the Continental Congress, President-elect, Presidential Service Badge, Presidential reputation, Protestant, Puritan, Reagan, Republicans, Richard Neustadt, Richard Nixon, Robert E. Lee, Robert Livingston, Roman Catholic, Ronald Reagan, Rutherford B. Hayes, Samuel J. Tilden, Sarah T. Hughes, Secret Service, Secretary of Homeland Security, Secretary of Veterans Affairs, Senate, Spiro Agnew, State of New York, Tecumseh's curse, The Hunt For Red October, The Presidents of the United States of America (band), Theodore Roosevelt, Thomas Jefferson, To date, Tom Clancy, U.S. Constitution, U.S. presidential election, U.S.C., Ulysses Grant, Ulysses S. Grant, United States, United States Code, United States Constitution, United States District Court, United States presidential line of succession, Vice President, Warren G. Harding, Warren Harding, Washington Post, Washington, DC, White House, William Cushing, William Henry Harrison, William Howard Taft, William McKinley, William McKinley's, Woodrow Wilson, World War I, World War II, Zachary Taylor, armed forces, arsenic poisoning, associate justice, bachelor, cerebral hemorrhage, chief executive, diplomatic passport, federal government, federal judicary, free world, head of government, head of state, heart attack, human rights, impeached, impeachment, indigestion, leap years, limits, list of Presidents of the United States, mass media, nationally televised debates, natural-born citizen, natural-born citizenship, notary public, own homes, plurality, pneumonia, presidential library, presidential system, primary elections, republic, running mate, superpower, swing states, tsunami of 2004, twentieth amendment, urban legend, widowers
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Presidential facts", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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