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Interestin­g facts about U.S. Presidents

- Metro Creative Connection­s

Americans celebrate Presidents’ Day each year on the third Monday in February. The holiday is known as Washington’s Birthday within the federal government. While it has honored George Washington since it was first establishe­d as a holiday in 1879, the day now honors all who served as United States presidents.

The widened scope of Presidents’ Day affords a great opportunit­y for Americans to learn some interestin­g facts about the individual­s who have taken office since George Washington first did so in 1789.

• Anecdotes abound in regard to George Washington, and his famed wooden teeth is among them. However, that story is an enduring myth and not reflective of reality. Various historians and groups, including the National Constituti­on Center, note that George Washington’s dentures were not made of wood, but rather a combinatio­n of ivory, gold and human and animal teeth, among other materials.

• Two former presidents and founding fathers passed away within hours of each other. John Adams, who succeeded Washington as the nation’s second president in 1797, and Thomas Jefferson, who served as the third president of the United States between 1801 and 1809, each died on July 4, 1826. The two one-time friends and then foes ultimately reconciled prior to their deaths.

• John Adams and his son, John Quincy Adams, who served as the sixth president of the United States from 1825 to 1829, are the only presidents among the first twelve to have never owned slaves.

• Though outdoor inaugurati­ons are now the standard, they were not always. The nation’s fifth president, James Monroe, was the first to be inaugurate­d in the elements.

• So long as they’re eligible to run for reelection, sitting presidents typically seek a second term. But that’s not always the case. James K. Polk, who served as the nation’s eleventh president, was the first to retire after one term. Though Polk did not necessaril­y set a trend, subsequent presidents James Buchanan, Rutherford B. Hayes, Calvin Coolidge, and Harry S. Truman also did not seek a second term. And while Teddy Roosevelt did not seek a second term in 1908, he did in 1912.

• Many U.S. presidents came from humble beginnings. Millard Filmore, who served as the thirteenth president between 1850 and 1853, was born into poverty in upstate New York. Filmore became president upon the sudden death of President Zachary Taylor, who died suddenly on July 9. Perhaps his humble origins and unexpected ascendancy to the presidency is why Filmore memorably refused an honorary degree from Oxford University.

• One of the more notably named U.S. presidents was not actually given his memorable moniker at birth. According to the National Constituti­on Center, President Ulysses S. Grant, who was the eighteenth individual to take the office of the president, was actually named Hiram Ulysses Grant. He only became Ulysses S. Grant, a name that clearly stuck, after Congressma­n Thomas Hamer mistakenly listed his name as “Ulysses S. Grant” upon nominating the young man to attend West Point.

• President John F. Kennedy, who served as the thirty-fifth U.S. president until his assassinat­ion in November 1963, was the first American president born in the twentieth century. It will likely be awhile before the first U.S. president born in the twenty-first century takes office, as the nation’s current president, Joe Biden, was born just 25 years after JFK.

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