47 Amazing Facts About All 45 American Presidents

Discover which American president wanted to be a concert violinist, who carried a dictionary in his pocket, and who burned his White House portrait.
The red, white, and blue.
The red, white, and blue. | Lynne Gilbert/Moment/Getty Images

In March 1789, the U.S. Constitution was officially enacted and the office of the president of the United States was established. The following month, General George Washington was sworn in as the first commander-in-chief and since then, 45 men have held the job (two in two non-consecutive terms, which is why we have 47 presidencies total). Below is an interesting tidbit about each person who has held the highest office in the land.

  1. George Washington
  2. John Adams
  3. Thomas Jefferson
  4. James Madison
  5. James Monroe
  6. John Quincy Adams
  7. Andrew Jackson
  8. Martin Van Buren
  9. William Henry Harrison
  10. John Tyler
  11. James K. Polk
  12. Zachary Taylor
  13. Millard Fillmore
  14. Franklin Pierce
  15. James Buchanan
  16. Abraham Lincoln
  17. Andrew Johnson
  18. Ulysses S. Grant
  19. Rutherford B. Hayes
  20. James A. Garfield
  21. Chester A. Arthur
  22. Grover Cleveland
  23. Benjamin Harrison
  24. Grover Cleveland
  25. William McKinley
  26. Theodore Roosevelt
  27. William Howard Taft
  28. Woodrow Wilson
  29. Warren G. Harding
  30. Calvin Coolidge
  31. Herbert Hoover
  32. Franklin D. Roosevelt
  33. Harry S. Truman
  34. Dwight D. Eisenhower
  35. John F. Kennedy
  36. Lyndon B. Johnson
  37. Richard M. Nixon
  38. Gerald R. Ford
  39. Jimmy Carter
  40. Ronald Reagan
  41. George H.W. Bush
  42. Bill Clinton
  43. George W. Bush
  44. Barack Obama
  45. Donald Trump
  46. Joe Biden
  47. Donald Trump

George Washington

George Washington
Washington taking command of the American Army. | Heritage Images/GettyImages

Not only is George Washington the father of the country, he's technically the highest-ranking member of the nation's military. On July 4, 1976, the country's bicentennial, a joint resolution was passed to posthumously promote Washington to the general of the armies of the United States, ensuring that no other member of the military could ever outrank him. This effectively makes George Washington the United States's only six-star general. 

John Adams

John Adams
John Adams | Heritage Images/GettyImages

John Adams signed a congressional act creating the United States Marine Band in 1798, which is now the oldest active professional musical organization in the U.S. Known as the President's Own, they played at the first ever New Year's celebration at the president’s house and, later, at Thomas Jefferson's inauguration.

Thomas Jefferson

Thomas Jefferson by Rembrandt Peale
Thomas Jefferson by Rembrandt Peale | Fine Art/GettyImages

Thomas Jefferson offered to sell his personal library when the Library of Congress was burned by the British during the War of 1812. He sold them 6487 books from his own collection, the largest in America at the time.

James Madison

Portrait of James Madison
Portrait of James Madison | Fine Art/GettyImages

James and Dolley Madison were crazy for ice cream. They had an ice house built on the grounds of their Montpelier estate so that they could enjoy ice cream and cold drinks all summer long, and they were known to serve bowls of oyster ice cream at official government functions.

James Monroe

James Monroe
James Monroe | Heritage Images/GettyImages

James Monroe and his wife, Elizabeth, attended Napoleon's coronation at Notre-Dame Cathedral in 1804 while he was serving as the American ambassador in the U.K.

John Quincy Adams

John Quincy Adams by Gilbert Stuart
John Quincy Adams by Gilbert Stuart | Fine Art/GettyImages

John Quincy Adams enjoyed skinny-dipping. He was known to take 5 a.m. plunges in the Potomac River as part of his morning exercise routine.

Andrew Jackson

Andrew Jackson by James Barton Longacre
Andrew Jackson by James Barton Longacre | Historical Picture Archive/GettyImages

Andrew Jackson despised banks and made it his mission to defund the Second Bank of the United States (he succeeded). So, it seems particularly ironic that his portrait has graced the $20 since 1929.

Martin Van Buren

Martin Van Buren by Francis Alexander
Martin Van Buren by Francis Alexander | Fine Art/GettyImages

Born in New York in 1782, Martin Van Buren was the first president to have been born after the American Revolution, technically making him the first American-born president. (The seven before him were all born in the American colonies.)

William Henry Harrison

William Henry Harrison
William Henry Harrison | Heritage Images/GettyImages

Harrison kept a goat as his pet, but never bothered to name him. (He called him Billy goat.) He also had a beloved cow he called Sukey.

John Tyler

Portrait of John Tyler by George Peter Alexander Healy
Portrait of John Tyler by George Peter Alexander Healy | Fine Art/GettyImages

John Tyler loved music and had considered becoming a concert violinist before deciding to follow his father's advice and study law. Often, he would play music for guests at the White House and in his later years he devoted himself to perfecting his skill at violin and fiddle. In 2004, when he was sculpted in bronze as part of a presidents' memorial in South Dakota, the artists included his violin in his statue.

James K. Polk

President James K. Polk
President James K. Polk | Heritage Images/GettyImages

When he was 17, James Polk needed surgery to have some kidney stones removed. He had some brandy to numb the pain but was awake for the entire procedure—anesthesia wouldn't be invented for another 30-some years.

Zachary Taylor

Zachary Taylor and his horse, Old Whitey.
Zachary Taylor and his horse, Old Whitey. | Hulton Archive, Getty Images

Zachary Taylor was a war hero whose beloved horse, Old Whitey, was nearly as popular as he was—numerous times while the steed was grazing on the White House lawn, visitors would approach him to pluck a hair from his tail for a souvenir.

Millard Fillmore

Portrait Engraving of Millard Fillmore
Portrait Engraving of Millard Fillmore | Historical Picture Archive/GettyImages

A voracious reader, Millard Fillmore was known to keep a dictionary on him in order to improve his vocabulary.

Franklin Pierce

Franklin Pierce by George P.A. Healy
Franklin Pierce by George P.A. Healy | Fine Art/GettyImages

Franklin Pierce had a number of nicknames, including "Handsome Frank," but likely the most embarrassing was "Fainting Frank." As a brigadier general in the Mexican-American war, he sustained a groin and knee injury during a battle in 1847 when he was thrown against the pommel of his horse. He only briefly passed out from the pain, but the nickname stuck around for life.

James Buchanan

James Buchanan 15th President Of The United States Of America 19th Century
James Buchanan | Heritage Images/GettyImages

Though James Buchanan was engaged once in his late twenties, she broke it off. He became the only president who was a lifelong bachelor.

Abraham Lincoln

Abraham Lincoln
Abraham Lincoln | Historical/GettyImages

Before Abraham Lincoln found his "look" with his famous beard, he was known for his fairly unkempt appearance. One reporter referred to his "thatch of wild republican hair" with his "irregular flocks of thick hair carelessly brushed" across his face.

Andrew Johnson

Andrew Johnson
Andrew Johnson | Heritage Images/GettyImages

In his day, Andrew Johnson was known as the best-dressed president. Growing up, his mother sent him to apprentice with a tailor, and he frequently made his own clothes and suits.

Ulysses S. Grant

Ulysses S Grant
General Ulysses S. Grant | Hulton Archive/GettyImages

In an attempt to unite the North and South, Ulysses S. Grant made Christmas a national holiday in 1870.

Rutherford B. Hayes

Rutherford B. Hayes
Rutherford B. Hayes | Library of Congress/GettyImages

The first Siamese cat to arrive in America was sent as a gift to Hayes and his wife, Lucy, by the American consul in Bangkok. Siam the cat landed at the White House in 1879 after traveling by ship to Hong Kong then San Francisco, and then by train to Washington, D.C.

James A. Garfield

James A Garfield
President James Garfield | Heritage Images/GettyImages

As a child, James Garfield dreamed of being a sailor. He read a number of nautical novels which fueled his imagination, but a teenage job towing barges was as close to a seafaring life as he saw.

Chester A. Arthur

Chester A. Arthur
Chester A. Arthur | National Archives/GettyImages

Chester A. Arthur oversaw a massive renovation of the White House and its private chambers. Arthur hired Louis C. Tiffany—Tiffany and Co.'s first design director and the man most known for his work with stained glass—to do all of the redesign. To help cover some of the costs, Arthur had 24 wagon-loads of old furniture, drapes, and other household items (some of which dated back to the Adams administration) sold at auction.

Grover Cleveland

Grover Cleveland
Grover Cleveland | Print Collector/GettyImages

He was born Stephen Grover Cleveland, but dropped Stephen before he entered into politics. He was affectionately called "Uncle Jumbo" by his younger relatives because he was nearly 6 feet tall and weighed about 270 pounds.

Benjamin Harrison

Benjamin Harrison by Eastman Johnson
Benjamin Harrison by Eastman Johnson | Fine Art/GettyImages

Benjamin Harrison had a tight-knit family and loved to amuse and dote on his grandchildren. He put up the first recorded White House Christmas tree in 1889, and was known to put on the Santa suit for entertainment.

Grover Cleveland

Grover Cleveland by Eastman Johnson
Grover Cleveland by Eastman Johnson | Fine Art/GettyImages

Grover Cleveland was also the first U.S. president to serve non-consecutive terms, so he makes this list twice. Between terms, he moved back to New York City, worked at a law firm, and his wife gave birth to their famous first daughter, Baby Ruth.

William McKinley

President William McKinley
William McKinley | Library of Congress/GettyImages

William McKinley had a double yellow-headed Amazon parrot named Washington Post who served in an official capacity as a White House greeter. The bird also knew the song "Yankee Doodle Dandy"—the president would whistle the first few notes, and then Washington Post would finish the rest.

Theodore Roosevelt

Portrait of Theodore Roosevelt
Theodore Roosevelt | Hulton Archive, Getty

For his official White House portrait, Theodore Roosevelt chose the famed French portraiture artist Theobald Chartran, who had earlier done a portrait of the first lady Edith Roosevelt. "It was difficult to get the president to sit still," The New York Times reported Chartran said before the painting was unveiled and displayed in France in 1903. "I never had a more restless or more charming sitter." Roosevelt, however, hated the painting, and after hiding it in a dark hall of the White House for years, he eventually burned it.

William Howard Taft

William Howard Taft
William Howard Taft | Library of Congress/GettyImages

In 1910, William Taft became the first president to attend baseball's opening day and throw the ceremonial first pitch, a tradition that has been honored by nearly every president since.

Woodrow Wilson

portrait of Woodrow Wilson
Woodrow Wilson | Tony Essex/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

Woodrow Wilson is among many U.S. Presidents known for their love of golf. Wilson enjoyed daily rounds to stay in shape and relax, particularly during World War I, when he even used black golf balls so he could play through the winter.

Warren G. Harding

Warren Gamaliel Harding
Warren Gamaliel Harding with his wife. | brandstaetter images/GettyImages

Warren G. Harding loved playing poker and held weekly games at the White House. Rumor has it he even bet, and lost, an entire set of official White House china.

Calvin Coolidge

Portrait of Calvin Coolidge
Calvin Coolidge | Library of Congress/GettyImages

Though three presidents (Adams, Jefferson, and Monroe) have died on the 4th of July, Calvin Coolidge is the only president to have been born on that date.

Herbert Hoover

Herbert Hoover
Herbert Hoover | Keystone/GettyImages

After he left office, Herbert Hoover wrote a number of books, including The Ordeal of Woodrow Wilson, the first biography of a president written by another president.

Franklin D. Roosevelt

Franklin D. Roosevelt
Franklin D. Roosevelt | Historical/GettyImages

When Franklin married Eleanor Roosevelt in 1905, they chose the date March 17 because President Theodore Roosevelt would be in New York City for the St. Patrick's Day parade, and he'd agreed to walk Eleanor, his niece, down the aisle. FDR and TR were fifth cousins.

Harry S. Truman

Harry S. Truman
Harry S. Truman | Library of Congress/GettyImages

Though Harry Truman met his wife, Bess, in the fifth grade and they were high school sweethearts, they didn't marry until they were in their mid-thirties.

Dwight D. Eisenhower

Dwight D. Eisenhower in front of a WWII map.
Dwight D. Eisenhower | Keystone/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

Even though Ike's military career spanned both World Wars and made him one of only nine men who have ever attained the rank of five-star general, he never saw active combat.

John F. Kennedy

JFK during a campaign.
John F. Kennedy campaigning. | Keystone/Getty Images

JFK lived off of his family's considerable trusts, so he donated all of his congressional and presidential salaries to charities like the United Negro College Fund and Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts of America.

Lyndon B. Johnson

Lyndon B. Johnson behind a podium.
Lyndon B. Johnson | Keystone/Getty Images

Lyndon Johnson had two beagles named Him and Her. The dogs became national celebrities after being frequently photographed with the president; they were heavily featured in a 1964 Life magazine profile that stated, "Not many dogs have been privileged to shoo birds off the White House lawn, get underfoot at a Cabinet meeting, or mingle with dignitaries at a state ball."

Richard M. Nixon

Richard Nixon playing the piano.
Richard Nixon playing the piano. | National Archive/Newsmakers

Nixon's mother encouraged him to play piano at an early age and he went on to learn violin, clarinet, saxophone, and accordion. In 1961, he even performed a song he wrote on The Jack Paar Program.

Gerald R. Ford

Former President Gerald Ford
Gerald Ford | Aaron Rapoport/GettyImages

Ford attended the University of Michigan, where he was a star football player. The team won national titles in both 1932 and '33 (Ford's sophomore and junior years). After graduation, he turned down offers to play with both the Detroit Lions and Green Bay Packers; instead, he took a coaching job at Yale University because he also wanted to attend its law school.

Jimmy Carter

Jimmy Carter campaigning
Jimmy Carter campaigning. | Mikki Ansin/GettyImages

Jimmy Carter was known for his frugality, and he went so far as to sell the presidential yacht while he was in office. The USS Sequoia had been in use since the Hoover administration, but by 1977, it cost $800,000 a year in upkeep and staffing. Carter sold it for $236,000.

Ronald Reagan

Ronald Reagan in 1965.
Ronald Reagan | Warner Bros./Courtesy of Getty Images

Ronald Reagan's last acting role was also his first go as a villain. The film, 1964's The Killers, was based on an Ernest Hemingway story and was intended to be one of the first made-for-television movies. The network, however deemed it too violent for TV, so it was released in theaters instead.

George H.W. Bush

George H.W. Bush and wife Barbara Bush in November 1978.
George H.W. Bush and wife Barbara Bush. | Dirck Halstead/Liaison

George and his wife, Barbara, met as teenagers in 1941 and were married just over two years later. They died within months of each other in 2018, and their 73-year marriage was the second-longest of any first couple. The longest presidential marriage was that of Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter, who were married for 77 years. The third-longest was John and Abigail Adams at 54 years. Adams was the only other president whose son also held the job.

Bill Clinton

ZIK - Collection
Bill Clinton at a campaign event. | United Archives/GettyImages

A 16-year-old Bill Clinton managed to shake hands with President John F. Kennedy at a Boys Nation event in 1963. This would take place just four months before Kennedy's assassination.

George W. Bush

George W. Bush at a Texas Rangers game.
George W. Bush at a Texas Rangers game. | Ben Ludeman/Texas Rangers/GettyImages

In 1993—two years before he became the governor of Texas—George W. Bush ran the Houston marathon, finishing with a time of 3:44:52. He is the only president to have ever run a marathon.

Barack Obama

Obama playing basketball with his staff.
Barack Obama plays basketball with cabinet secretaries and members of Congress on the White House court in 2009. | Pete Souza, The White House via Getty Images

Barack Obama's love of basketball was well-documented during his presidency, but according to one of his high school teammates, he earned the nickname "Barry O'Bomber" because of all the tough shots he was known to take (and miss).

Donald Trump

Donald Trump
Donald Trump inspects a bicycle. | Chip Somodevilla/GettyImages

Of the many commercial products that Donald Trump has put his name on, the Tour de Trump—a bike race meant to be the American answer to the Tour de France—might be the oddest. It was called that for its first two years (1989-'90) before being renamed the Tour de DuPont for its final six years as an event.

Joe Biden

U.S. President Joe Biden delivers his inaugural address on the West Front of the U.S. Capitol on January 20, 2021 in Washington, DC.
U.S. President Joe Biden delivers his inaugural address on the West Front of the U.S. Capitol on January 20, 2021 in Washington, DC. | Alex Wong/Getty Images

Among Joe Biden's family members who made their way to the White House with him were two beloved German shepherds, Champ and Major—and one of them made history. Major, who was adopted from the Delaware Humane Association in Wilmington, Delaware, in 2018, was the first shelter dog to ever occupy the position of first pet.

Donald Trump

Donald Trump
Donald Trump attends a caucus meeting. | Andrew Harnik/GettyImages

Donald Trump is unique among U.S. presidents as the only one to have been impeached twice. The first time, in December 2019, the House of Representatives impeached him for abuse of power and obstruction of Congress over his solicitation of foreign interference in the 2020 presidential election. The Senate acquitted him of both articles of impeachment. The second time, in January 2021, the House brought only one article against Trump, but it was a big one: incitement to insurrection for his role in the January 6 attack on the Capitol. The Senate acquitted him of that charge as well.

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This story has been updated for 2021.