Teddybear191 Links page to Presidents and First Ladies and Vice Presidents of the USA

img by anne's place

img by anne's place

Hi Everyone! If are looking for the page on Vice President Gore I have moved it. Since the Election is over I decided to make this site into an educational site on Presidents and Vice Presidents. There are going to be links to all the Presidents and First Ladies and Vice Presidents on this page. Plus links to other federal and state government offices. Some of the information on this page was taking from the book "The Look-It-Up Book of Presidents" By Wyatt Blassingame. I hope you find this page very helpful. Please e-mail me and let me know what you think.

Thank you for stopping by.

Norma Lamothe E-mail me at:tbear53@hotmail.com

George Washington 1789-1797

First Lady Martha Dandridge Custis Washington1731-1802

Vice President John Adams 1789-1797

Teddybear's Page on George Washington

John Adams 1797-1801

First Lady Abigail Smith Adams 1744-1818

Vice President Thomas Jefferson 1797-1801

Teddybear's page on John Adams

Thomas Jefferson 1801-1809

First Lady Martha Wayles Skelton Jefferson 1748-1782

Vice President Aaron Burr 1801-1805

Arron Burr was the 3rd Vice President.He was a Republican.

He was born February 6 1756 in Newark New Jersey.

He died September 14 1836.

Arron Burr was not elected to a second term.

George Clinton 4th Vice President 1805-1809

Teddybear's page on Thomas Jefferson

James Madison 1809-1817

First Lady Dolley Payne Todd Madison 1768-1849

Vice President George Clinton 1809-1812

Vice President Elbridge Gerry Republican March 4 1813 to November 23 1814

Teddybear's page on James Madison

James Monroe 1817-1825

James Monroe was the fifth President of the United States. He was born April 28 1758, in Westmoreland County, Virginia.

He died July 4 1831 in New York, New York.

When his second term was over, Monroe went back to his home in Virginia. He died while visiting his daughter in New York in 1831. The day was the fourth of July. Of the five Presidents who took part in the Revolution, three of them-Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, and James Monroe- died on a Fourth of July.

He took Florida from Spain. He created the Monroe Doctrine, and signed the Missouri Compromise.

First Lady Elizabeth Kortright Monroe 1768-1830

John Quincy Adams 1825-1829

John Quincy Adams was the 6th President of the United States.

He was born July 11 1767 in Quincy Massachusetts.

He died February 23 1848 in the speaker's room in the House of Representatives, Washington DC. He was the first President to be a son of a President.

Adams wanted the United States to become a center of learning. He asked Congress to build a national university. He asked for roads and canals and a naval academy. Later most of these things would be done. But Adams could never get along with Congress. As a result they refused to do what he asked. In the election of 1828 he was defeated and Andrew Jackson was elected.

Deeply hurt by this defeat Adams went back to his home in Massachusetts. But then the people of his area elected him to Congress. Some people said he would be disgraced by serving in Congress after being President. Adams's answer was typical of him. He said "that no man was disgraced by serving his country.

For the next seventeen years Adams served in Congress. He fought for the things he had always believed in. He helped establish the Smithsonian Institution. He fought against slavery and for civil rights and free speech. He was one of the nation's finest congressmen. He was at his desk on February 21 1848 when he fell unconscious. Two days later he died.

Ranked by some historians as a failure because little was done during his term in office.

First Lady Louisa Catherine Johnson Adams 1775-1852

Andrew Jackson 1829-1837

Andrew Jackson was the 7th President of the United States.

He was born March 15 1767 in the Waxhaw settlement (on the border of North Carolina), South Carolina.

He died June 8 1845 near Nashville, Tennessee.

Andrew Jackson did more to show how great the powers of the office were than any President after Washington. He used these powers to help make laws.

Andrew Jackson believed in states' rights, but only so far. He said "no one state had the right to decide which national laws it would obey and which it would not. If this were so , the Union itself would fall apart." Jackson said he would enforce the national laws even if it meant war with South Carolina. He got ready to fight. Fortunately a compromise was worked out. But Jackson had showed, as Lincoln would later, what a strong President could do to save the Union.

Jackson's likeness is on the $20 bill.

First Lady Rachel Donelson Jackson 1767-1828

Martin Van Buren 1837-1841

Martin Van Buren was the 8th President of the United States.

He was born December 5 1782 in Kinderhook New York.

He died July 24 1862 in Kinderhook New York.

He was caught in one of the nation's worst financial depressions. This was unfairly blamed on him.

Van Buren was trying hard to be a good President. Yet he was easy to blame. He was a dapper dresser and he liked to eat well. His enemies said he drank foreign wines and used gold forks and silver plates.

This was the same kind of gossip that Van Buren had once spread to help Andrew Jackson defeat John Quincy Adams. Now it was enough to make hungry people without jobs vote against Van Buren. In the election of 1840 he was defeated by William Henry Harrison.

First lady Hannah Hoes Van Buren 1783-1819

William Henry Harrison March to April 1841

William Henry Harrison was the 9th President of the United States.

He was born February 9 1773 at Berkley Plantation in Charles City County Virginia.

He died April 4 1841 in Washington DC.

He was the first President to die while in office. As soon as Harrison took office long lines of people were asking him for jobs. He was a kindly man. He wanted to help and he worked hard. Worn out by his Campaign, his inauguration speech (which was the longest in history-one hour and forty-five minutes), and the favor seekers, Harrison caught a cold. The cold turned into Pneumonia and Harrison died one month after his inauguration. He is remembered for having the shortest term of all the Presidents.

First Lady Anna Tuthill Symmes Harrison 1775-1864

John Tyler 1841-1845

John Tyler was the 10th President of the united states.

He was born March 29 1790 near Greenway Virginia.

He died January 18 1862 in Richmond Virginia.

When Tyler's term was over he went back to Virginia. Later as the Civil War was beginning, he was elected to the confederate Congress. He died, however, before that Congress ever met.

He Made it clear that on the death of the President the Vice President became President with all the powers of the office. Served as a President with out a party.

First Lady Lettia Christian Tyler 1790-1842

First Lady Julia Gardiner Tyler 1820-1889

James Knox Polk 1845-1849

James Polk was the 11th President of the United States.

He was born November 2 1795 in Mecklenburg county, North Carolina.

He died June 15 1849 in Nashville Tennessee.

President Polk refused to run for a second term. As President he had worked hard. After four years in office he was both tired and very sick. He went back to his home in Nashville Tennessee and died a few months later.

He bullied a small weak nation (Mexico) into fighting a war it did not want. But added California and much of the south west to the United States. He Settled the Canadian border without war.

First Lady Sarah Childress Polk 1803-1891

Zachary Taylor 1849-1850

Zachary Taylor was the 12th President of the United States.

He was born November 24 1784 in Orange County Virginia.

He died July 9 1850 in Washington D.C.

Slowly Congress worked out a comprise on the question of slavery in the new states. President Taylor did not like it. He might have vetoed it. But suddenly on the 4th of July 1850 he became ill. Five days later he died.

Zachary Taylor knew little about the duties of a President but faced his problems honestly though with little political talent.

First Lady Margaret Mackall Smith Taylor

Millard Fillmore 1850-1853

Millard Fillmore was the 13th President of the United States.

He was born January 7 1800 in Loke, New York.

He died March 8 1874 in Buffalo New York.

As President, Fillmore did do one thing of lasting importance. For two hundred years Japan had refused to trade or to have anything to do with other countries. In 1853 Fillmore sent Commodore Matthew Perry to visit Japan. Perry met with the Japanese emperor, who agreed to let American trading ships visit Japan. This became known as the "opening" of Japan.

Fillmore was the last Whig Party President.

Fillmore sent the US Fleet to open trade with Japan. He helped pass the Great Compromise of 1850.

First Lady Abigail Powers Fillmore 1798-1853

Franklin Pierce 1853-1857

Franklin Pierce was the 14th President of the United States.

He was born on November 23 1804 in Hillsboro, New Hampshire.

He died October 8 1869 in Concord New Hampshire.

Franklin Pierce was the only President to be from New Hampshire.

Many men knew that the Kansas-Nebraska Act would cause bitter trouble between the North and the South. Somehow Pierce did not seem to understand this. So he pushed the law through Congress.

Now each territory could vote on slavery for itself. Men from the South rushed into Kansas so they could vote for slavery. Men from the North rushed in to vote against it. The fighting was so bitter that the new territory was often called Bleeding Kansas.

All Over the natation people were arguing about slavery-was it right or wrong? By the end of Franklin Pierce first term the nation was hurtling toward its most terrible tragedy, the Civil War. A new antislavery party, called the Republican Party was formed. And Northerners in Pierce's own Democratic party would not nominate him for a second term. He went back home to New Hampshire. But even there he was not popular anymore.

Pierce put through the Gadsden Purchase acquiring what is now Southern Arizona and New Mexico. He favored the Kansas-Nebraska Act, Which open the door to the Civil war.

First Lady Jane Means Appleton Pierce 1806-1853

James Buchanan 1857-1861

James Buchanan was the 15th President of the United States.

He was born, April 23 1791 near Mercersburg Pennsylvania.

He died June 1 1868 in Lancaster Pennsylvania.

By the election of 1860 slavery was the one all-important question. The Democratic split over the question. One group favored North, one the South. But neither group nominated Buchanan. The Republican party nominated a tall, gaunt man named Abraham Lincoln.

Lincoln won but there was a period of several months before he took office. For Buchanan these months proved the hardest of his four years as President.

One southern state after another seceded from the Union. With all his heart Buchanan wanted to hold the Union together. But he was not sure what to do. He did not believe that any state had the right to secede. At the same time he did not believe the Union had the right to force a state to stay in the Union. Also he was hopeful-he was always hopeful-that if he did nothing, the states that had left the Union would decide to rejoin.

And so he did nothing.

On March 4 1861, Lincoln became President. A few weeks later the Civil War began. And at long last, Buchanan made up his mind. The North, he said must back President Lincoln "to a man," no matter what the price.

Buchanan faced the final breakup of the nation over slavery. He tried hard to prevent war but made matters worse instead of better.

First Lady Harriet Lane 1830-1903

Abraham Lincoln 1861-1865

Abraham Lincoln was the 16th President of the United states from March 4 1861 to April 15 1865.

He was born February 12 1809 in Hardin County Kentucky.

He died April 15 1865 in Washington DC.

Lincoln was opposed to the spread of slavery. More than that, he wanted to help the poor of any race. He knew what it was to be poor. He began to make speeches in favor of keeping the territories free. "new free states," he said, "are places for poor people to go and better their condition." They should not be turned over to rich slave owners.

Lincoln's great gift was his ability to make the common people understand and believe in what he was doing. His purpose was to save the Union because to him the Union was not just a group of states that had gotten together to form a government. It was the only imporant democratic government in the world. If it were destroyed, it would mean that free men were not able to govern themselves. The fight to save the Union was the fight to save free government all over the world.

On April 9 1865, General Robert E. Lee surrendered to Lincoln's general, U.S. Grant, in a house in the small village of Appomattox Courthouse, Virginia. On the night of April 14, five days later, President and Mrs Lincoln went to see a play at a Washington theater. During the play an actor named John Wilkes Booth stepped into the box behind Lincoln and shot him in the back of the head. The next day one of the greatest men in all American History lay dead.

It is possible that Booth, in some crazed way, believed he was helping the South. But in fact, Lincoln's death hurt the the South a great deal. Had Lincoln lived, he might have bought the South back into the Union with the least possible bloodshed and bitterness. Without Lincoln some of the worst men both North and South came into power.

Lincoln held the nation together in it's most difficult time. In a speech at the Gettysburg battlefield he said it was the people's duty to make sure "that this nation under God, shall have a new birth of freedom, and that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth." More than any other man, he helped make these words come true.

Lincoln's likeness is on the $5 dollar bill and the penny.

First Lady Mary Todd Lincoln 1818-1876

Andrew Johnson 1865-1869

Andrew Johnson was the 17th President of the United States.

He was born December 29 1808 in Raleigh North Carolina.

He died July 31 1875 in Carter Station, Tennessee.

Johnson like Lincoln did not want to take revenge on the southern states. He wanted them bought back into the Union as quickly and easily as possible. Although some of the former leaders of the Confederacy were not pardoned, he gave a pardon to all southerners who promise loyalty to the Union.

Johnson did not have Lincoln's great power to persuade and lead the people. He made speeches asking for moderate treatment of the South. But his own speeches were not moderate. In fact, they were so violent that he lost voters rather than gained them.

Finally Congress decided to impeach, or get rid of, President Johnson-the first time in the history of the United States that this had happened. There were no lawful grounds for the charges bought against Johnson. They were based on anger rather than reason. But it was time when anger, not reason, ruled much of the nation.

During the trial one of the lawyers defending Johnson told Congress, "he is a man of few ideas, but they are right and true, and he can suffer death sooner than yield up or violate one of them." It was a good picture of the President. Even so, out of fifty-four senators, thirty-six voted to impeach Johnson, and nineteen to acquit him. However the law required a two-thirds majority to impeach. so Andrew Johnson missed being put out of office by one vote.

Johnson's term ended soon after his impeachment hearing. He went back to Tennessee. And six years later he was once more elected to the US Senate. Meanwhile some of the senators who had once voted against him had come to admire his courage. They stood and clapped for him when he entered the Senate.

First Lady Eliza McCardle Johnson 1810-1876

Ulysses Simpson Grant 1869-1877

Ulysses S. Grant was the 18th President of the United States.

He was born April 27 1822 in Point Pleasant Ohio.

He died July 23 1885 in Mount McGregor New York.

Grant's victories bought an end to the Civil War and made him a national hero. The Republicans nominated him for President in 1868. He had never been interested in Politics. He had only voted for President once in his life. But he was elected easily.

Grant was personally honest, but many of the men around him were crocks. His administration was one of the most dishonest in American history.

First Lady Julia Dent Grant 1826-1902

Rutherford Birchard Hayes 1877-1881

Rutherford B. Hayes was the 19th President of the United States.

He was born October 4 1822 in Delaware, Ohio.

He died on January 17 1893 in Fremont Ohio.

History has a way of repeating itself. The Election of 1876 was a lot like the election of 2000.

As the Presidential election of 1876 drew near, most persons thought the Democrats were sure to win. The republican adminstration under Grant was in disgrace. The party itself was divided. Some hoped they could keep on just as they were. Others thought the only chance to win was to have a candiate known for his honesty. This group nominated Rutherford B. Hayes.

The Democratic candidate was named Samuel J. Tilden. When the election was over, Tilden had 4,284,020 votes. Hayes had 4,036,572 votes.These were popular votes-the votes of individual people all over the country. But it was the electorial college that cast the final vote. To win 185 electoral votes were needed. Tilden had 184. Hayes had 165. But the votes of four states (20 votes in all), were contested or disputed. Both the Democrats and Republicans claimed them. Three of these states-Florida, south Carolina, and Louisiana-were in the South. Although the Civil War had been over for 11 years, there was still a great deal of argument over who could vote and who couldn't. Both the Democrats and the Republicans claimed to have won.

If Tilden got one single vote from any of these states, he would win the election. But Hayes had to get every vote to win.

In Congress the argument went on for months. The time for the new President to take office came closer and closer. And still nobody knew who the new President would be.

Finally a deal was made. The Democrats agreed to accept a decision made by a committe. The committee was have eight Republicans and seven Democrats. Quite naturally the committee voted eight to seven to give all the votes from all the contested states to the Republicans. This made Hayes President.

Because of Congress, Hayes did not make all the reforms he would have liked. But on the whole he left the Federal government more honest than he found it. He refused to run for a second term and went back to his home in Ohio.

Hayes ended the period of reconstration in the South.

He tried to reform the federal government after the Grant adminstration.

He tried to improve the civil service system but met with little success.

First Lady Lucy Ware Hayes 1839-1889

James Abram Garfield 1881

James A Garfield 20th President of the United States.

He was born on November 19 1831 in Orange Ohio.

He died September 19 1881 in Elberon New Jersey.

As a congressman, Garfield was accused of taking bribes. He denied the charges, and they were never proved.

In 1880 there were three well-known men in the Republican party who were trying to get the presidential nomination. But at the nominating convention none of them could get a majority. Finally the delegates nominated Garfield as a compromise.

During the campaign the Democrats talked a lot about the bribes Garfield was said to have taken in Congress. But they could not prove anything and Garfield won an easy victory.

Garfield began his term by fighting some of the powerful congressmen who wanted to run the government their way. Garfield said he was going to prove that the President was not just a clerk for Congress.

The Federal government had almost no civil service (appointed government employees who were permanent and did not change with each new President.) Several Presidents had asked Congress for good civil service laws but Congress would not pass them. With every new administration many government workers got fired and new ones who had voted for the adminstration got hired. Each new President had to spend much of his time handing out jobs.

President Garfield did this too. Then on July 2 1881 he was shot by a man who was named Charles Giteau. When he shot the President, giteau shouted, "I am a Stalwart! Arthur is now President!" Later Giteau said he killed the President because Garfield denied him a job.

The entire nation was shocked. As a result of the Presiden't's murder, people began to demanded better civil service laws that would keep honest government workers on the job. and because the people demanded it Congress finally did improve the civil service laws.

Grafield was killed only a few months after taking office. Yet his death may have done more to improve honesty in government than he could have done had he lived.

First Lady Lucretia Rudolph Garfield 1832-1918

Chester Alan Arthur 1881-1885

Chester A. Arthur was born October 5 1829 in Fairfield Vermont.

He died November 18 1886 in New York, New York.

The entire nation was shocked at President Garfield's murder, and at the reason for it.Many peopl were frightened. They wondered what Arthur would be like as President. Some Stalwart politicians were happy to have Arthur become President. They thought things would go back the way they had been under President Grant.

Everyone was in for a surprise.

Arthur could not forget that Garfield had been murdered by a man who shouted, "Arthur is now President!" He could not forget that it was the kind of politics he and other Stalwarts had stood for that had caused such a thing to happen. A change came over Arthur. He realized that as President, his duty was to all the people, not just to one party. They very size of his job made him feel humble. He tried to carry on Garfield's work and asked Congress for a new civil service law.

The old Stalwart politicians became angry at Arthur. But now the people themselves were demanding reform. In the next congressional election many of the old politicans were defeated. After that it did not take long to get the new law passed.

Arthur went on to work hard and honestly at being President. He helped bring the navy up to date with modern ships. He changed the postal system to give better and cheaper service. But the Stalwart politicians did not forgive him. they refused to nominate him for President in 1884.

Arthur went back to his home in New York. He could not be elected President on his own. But the people of the country admired him far more than they had a few years before.

First Lady Ellen Lewis Herndon Arthur 1837-1880

Grover Cleveland 1885-1889 1893-1897

Grover Cleveland was the 22nd President of the United states from 1885-1889.

He was also the 24th President of the United States from 1893-1897.

He was born March 18 1837 in Caldwell, New Jersey.

He died June 24 1908 in Princeton New Jersey.

In 1884 Cleveland was nominated by the democrats to run for President. No Democrat had been elected President since the Civil War. However, at this time the Republican party was split into two groups. One group, called Mugwumps, were demanding reform and a more honest government. Because they did not like the Republician candidate, they voted for Cleveland. It was a very close election, but Cleveland won.

Cleveland began to reform the federal government as he had the state government of New York. He improved the civil service to get better government workers. He forced railroads to return eighty-one million acres of government land they had taken illegally. He made sure the navy got the best ships possible for the least money.

No President ever worked harder than Cleveland. Often he was at his desk until two or three in the morning. He studied every bill Congress passed and vetoed more than four hundred of them. Many of these gave pensions to Civil War veterans wheather or not they had been wounded. Cleveland believed this to be dishonest. When one politician told him that his actions might keep him from being reelected he said, "What's the use of being elected or reelected unless stand for something. In the election of 1888 Cleveland and the Democratic party stood for a low tariff. It was a very close election. Cleveland got more popular votes than Harrison. but Harrison won in the electoral college and became President.

When Mrs Cleveland moved out of the White House she told the servants to take good care of it. "I want everything just the way it is now when we come back," She said. "That will be exactly four years from now."

She was right. In 1892 Cleveland and harrison omce more ran against each other. This time Cleveland won. He was the only President in US history to serve two terms that did directly follow each other.

Cleveland's second term ended in 1897. And when he left office, the federal government was a better-working and more honest organization. His last words before he died were: "I have tried so hard to do right."

His likeness is on the $1000 bill.

First Lady Frances Folsom Cleveland 1864-1947

Benjamin Harrison 1889-1893

Benjamin Harrison was the 23rd President of the United States.

He was born august 20 1833 near North Bend Ohio.

He died March 13 1901 in Indianapolis Indiana.

Harrison could think about only one subject at a time. Sometimes deep in thought he would walk right past people he knew with out recognizing them. Because of this some people said he was cold and unfriendly. Actually he was a warm kind-hearted man. But he was not a good "black-slapping" politician. He did not like to meet big crowds of strangers. So he ran what was called a "front porch" campaign. He stayed at home and talked with small groups of politicians who came to see him.

As President Harrison wanted to continue the reform of the civil service started by Cleveland. He appointed a vigorous, hard-working young man named Theodore Roosevelt as commissioner. But not even roosevelt could do much, because Congress did not want reform. Within one year thirty thousands postmasters were fired so that new ones, who had friends in Congress could be appointed.

Harrison was in favor of a huge tariff. With his help cpongress passed the McKinley Tariff Act. This put a high tax on goods shipped to the United States from other countries. As a result prices went up. Farmers and small businessmen complained. At the same time some of the big manufacturers were having labor troubles. Labor unions said that the power of the government was being used to help the rich and hurt the poor.Laborers organized strikes to protest working long hours for low pay in airless factories that later became known has sweat shops. They wanted children to protected from doing adult labor and they demanded safe working conditions. Many of the members of the newly formed labor unions were immigrants. And as time passed, more and more of these immigrants got the vote. Many voters turned against Harrison and he was defeated in 1892. harrison went back to his home in Indianapolis. He wrote books about United States government and continued to practice law until his death in 1901.

First Lady Caroline Lavinia scott Harrison 1832-1892

William McKinley 1897-1901

William McKinley was the 25th President of the United States.

He was born January 29 1843 in Niles, Ohio.

He died September 14 1901 in Buffalo New York.

Like Benjamin Harrison, McKinley ran what was called a "front Porch" campaign. he did this because his wife was an invalid and he was devoted to her. He refused to leave her to travel around the country for long periods of time. So the wealthy men who were backing McKinley bought people from all over the country to see him. McKinley stood on the front porch and talked to them.

The Democrats claimed McKinley would take orders from the rich bankers in the big cities. But he won the election by a large majority.

In 1900 McKinley was elected to a second term. all over the country business was good. In 1901 Buffalo New york put on a big fair. McKinley visited it on September 6. He was in one of the buildings shaking hands with a huge crowd of people. he had just taken the flower he was wearing on his coat and had given it to a little girl when a man stepped up as if to shake hands. He had a handkerchief wrapped around his right hand. Inside the handkerchief was a gun. He fired two shots into the President. The man's name was Leon Czolgosz. he said he was a anarchist, someone who did not believe in government. He also said he wanted to kill a great ruler.

Even as McKinley lay wounded he thought of his invalid wife. He whispered to a friend beside him, "be careful how you tell her, Ohbe carefull how you tell her." Eight days later he died.

McKinley allowed the United States to be pushed into war with Spain, but made the United States a world power.

He acquired the Philippiness, Hawaii, Guam, and Puerto Rico as United States possecessions.

Hi likeness is on the $500 bill.

First Lady Ida Saxton McKinley 1847-1907

Theodore Roosevelt 1901-1909

Theodore Roosevelt was the 26th President of the United States. He was born October 27 1858 in New York, New York.

He died January 6 1919 at Sagamore Hill, Long Island New York.

First Lady Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt 1861-1948

William Howard Taft 1909-1913

William Taft was the 27th President of the United States.

He was born september 15 1857 in cincinnati Ohio. He died March 8 1930 in washington D.C.

First Lady Helen Heron Taft 1861-1943

Woodrow Wilson 1913-1921

Woodrow Wilson was the 28th President of the United States.

He was born December 29 1856 in Staunton Virginia.

He died February 3 1924 in Washington D.C.

First Lady Ellen Louise Axson Wilson 1860-1914

First Lady Edith Bolling Galt Wilson 1872-1961

William Gamaliel Harding 1921-1923

Warren Harding was the 29th President of the United States.

He was born November 2 1865 in Corsica, Ohio.

He died August 2 1923 in San Francisco California.

First Lady Florence Kling Harding 1860-1924

Calvin Coolidge 1923-1929

Calvin Coolidge was the 30th President of the United States.

He was born July 4 1872 in Plymouth Notch Vermont.

He died January 5 1933 in Northampton Massachusetts.

First Lady Grace Anna Goodhue Coolidge 1879-1957

Herbert Hoover 1929-1933

Herbert Hoover was the 31st President of the United States.

He was born August 10 1874 in West Branch, Iowa.

He died October 20 1964 in New York City, New York.

First Lady Lou Henry Hoover 1879-1944

Franklin Delano Roosevelt 1933-1945

Franklin D Roosevelt was the 32nd President of the United States.

He was born January 30 1882 in Hyde Park, New York.

He died april 12 1945 in Warm Springs Georgia.

First Lady Anna Eleanor Roosevelt Roosevelt 1884-1962

Harry S Truman 1945-1953

Harry S Truman was the 33rd President of the United States.

He was born May 8 1884 in Lamar Missouri.

He died December 26 1972 in Kansas City, Missouri.

First Lady Elizabeth Virginia Wallace Truman 1885-1982

Dwight David Eisenhower 1953-1961

Dwight D Eisenhower was 34th President of the United States.

He was born October 14 1890 in Denison Texas.

He died March 28 1969 in Washington D.C.

First Lady Mamie Geneva Doud Eisenhower

John Fitzgerald Kennedy 1961-1963

John F. Kennedy was the 35th President of the United States.

He was born May 29 1917 in Brookline Massachusetts.

He died November 22 1963 in Dallas Texas.

First Lady Jacqueline Lee Bouvier Kennedy Onassis 1929-1994

Lyndon Baines Johnson 1963-1969

Lyndon B. Johnson was the 36th President of the United States.

He was born August 22 1908 near Stonewall Texas.

He died January 22 1973 in San Antonio Texas.

First Lady Claudia Taylor (Lady Bird) Johnson 1912-

Richard Milhous Nixon 1969-1974

Richard M. Nixon was the 37th President of the United States.He was born January 9 1913 in Yorba Linda California.

He died

First Lady Patricia Ryan Nixon 1912-1992

Gerald Ford 1974-1977

Gerald Ford was the 38th President of the United States. he was born July 14 1913 in Omaha Nebraska.

First Lady Elizabeth Bloomer Ford 1918-

Jimmy (James Earl) Carter 1977-1981

Jimmy Carter was the 39th President of the United States. he was born October 1 1924 in Plains Georgia.First Lady Rosalynn Smith Carter 1927-

Ronald Wilson Reagan 1981-1989

Ronald Reagan was the 40th President of the United States.

He was born February 6 1911 in Tampico Illinois.

First Lady Nancy Davis Reagan 1923-

George Herbert Walker Bush 1989-1993

George Herbert Walker Bush was the 41st President of the United States. He was born June 12 1924 in Milton Massachusetts.

First Lady Barbara Pierce Bush 1925-

Bill (William Jefferson Blythe) Clinton 1993-2001

Bill Clinton was the 42nd President of the United States.

He was born August 19 1946 in Hope Arkansas.

First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton 1947-

George W Bush 2001

George W Bush is the 43rd President of the United States.

First Lady Laura Welch Bush