Main Menu

IT'S PRESIDENT'S DAY

Started by indianasmith, February 17, 2020, 12:52:58 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

indianasmith

IN HONOR OF PRESIDENT'S DAY:
Here are 45 random facts about America's 45 Presidents - feel free to share them!

GEORGE WASHINGTON only had one tooth left by the time he became President, which he stubbornly refused to have pulled for several years. Every new pair of Presidential dentures had to leave a hole for the lonely molar to poke through.
JOHN ADAMS was known for his volatile temper and sour disposition, but he was a devoted husband to his wife Abigail, and wrote her over 20,000 letters during their 60 year marriage.
THOMAS JEFFERSON was the father of American archaeology, carefully excavating an Indian mound on his plantation at Monticello and theorizing about its builders.
JAMES MADISON took personal command of troops in the field during the British raid on Washington, DC in August 1814, but was unable to keep the raw militia and outnumbered regulars from breaking and running away at the Battle of Bladensburg.
JAMES MONROE was a bland and boring President, but as Ambassador to France, he had extensive conversations with Napoleon, Talleyrand, and other leading figures in European history.
JOHN QUINCY ADAMS, as we all read years ago, enjoyed skinny dipping in the Potomac. What you might not know is he also kept a pet alligator in the White House. He also watched the Battle of Bunker Hill break out near his home when he was only 8 years old!
ANDREW JACKSON was the first President to survive an assassination attempt while in office. It took three Congressmen to pull the President off of his attacker!
MARTIN VAN BUREN helped the Southern states expand slavery during his term of office, but later ran for President again - on a Free Soil ticket to block the expansion of slavery.
WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON was in office 28 days before dying of pneumonia. If "he who governs least governs best," he was arguably the best President ever!
JOHN TYLER was the first VP to succeed to the Presidency on the death of his predecessor. He was promptly kicked out of the Whig Party which elected him when he refused to support their agenda, and the Democrats wouldn't take him back, so he was a President without a party for 3 1/2 years. Thing is, he had 14 kids, so the man obviously knew HOW to party . . .
JAMES K. POLK worked longer hours than any President - fourteen to sixteen hours a day, on average, delegating nothing. He drafted his own speeches, wrote his own letters, and died only three months after leaving office.
ZACHARY TAYLOR was a general in the Mexican War whose nickname was "Old Rough and Ready." At the Battle of Buena Vista, when things were looking rocky, an aide suggested the army prepare to retreat, Taylor spat out his chew of tobacco and said: "Zachary Taylor don't retreat, son!" That eloquence won him the White House.
MILLARD FILLMORE stepped up when Taylor died in 1850 and served for two and a half years. He was a competent administrator who signed the Compromise of 1850 into law, but his party had only won elections with war heroes, so they ditched him in favor of General Winfield Scott in 1852 - who promptly lost the election.
FRANKLIN PIERCE lost his only son in a railroad accident on the way to Washington, DC to take office. The boy's death shattered his marriage and his life, and he spent a good part of his presidency drunk.
JAMES BUCHANAN is widely regarded as the worst President in history, as well as being America's only bachelor President. There's been a lot of speculation that he may have been our first gay President, but frankly, if I were gay, I wouldn't claim him.
ABRAHAM LINCOLN has been the subject of more books than any other President, and he is also the only President to have a patented invention on file in the U.S. Patent Office - a device he came up with for lifting steamboats over sandbars and log jams.
ANDREW JOHNSON never attended school and was taught to read and write after he got married by his wife, He was the second President to be kicked out of the party that elected him, joining John Tyler in the "rejects club."
ULYSSES GRANT was, of course, a famous general as well as President. He was also a speed demon and was fined for driving his carriage too fast down the cobblestone streets of Washington, DC.
RUTHERFORD HAYES was a decorated Civil War officer, wounded five times in combat, who came to the White House in a hotly disputed election. He was a teetotaler who only served lemonade, water, and tea at White House dinners.
JAMES GARFIELD was shot in the back by Charles Giteau, a would-be assassin, but it was the doctors who killed poor Garfield by probing for the bullet with unwashed hands and causing a massive infection.
CHESTER A. ARTHUR was a corrupt spoilsman who surprised everyone by being an honest, competent President who reformed the Civil Service.
GROVER CLEVELAND was a bachelor when elected, but then the 47 year old surprised his friends and family by marrying 22 year old Frances Cleveland, the youngest First Lady in history. The first couple had a long and happy life together and had 6 children.
BENJAMIN HARRISON intended to be a doctor, but when he went to dissect his first human cadaver, the body turned out to be that of his grandfather, who had been dug up and sold by grave robbers two days after his funeral. The shocking sight drove the future President out of the medical field for good.
GROVER CLEVELAND was the only President to serve non-consecutive terms. During his second administration he had surgery to remove a cancerous tumor from his jaw - while floating on the Presidential yacht in the middle of the Potomac River!
WILLIAM MCKINLEY campaigned for President from his front porch, where he used his photographic memory to greet every visiting delegation's members individually, by name.
THEODORE ROOSEVELT was the only President to win the Nobel Peace Prize and the Medal of Honor, and also played a large role in saving the American bison from extinction.
WOODROW WILSON was a college President and one term governor of New Jersey when he was elected in 1912. Although funny and warm in private, he was a stickler for protocol and refused to compromise with Republicans on anything, letting the Treaty of Versailles die in the Senate rather than accept a single amendment to it.
WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT was a weighty President, topping the scales at nearly 250 pounds.  He was also the only man in American history to serve as both President and Chief Justice of the Supreme Court (not at the same time, obviously!)
WARREN G. HARDING was a small town newspaper editor who was badly out of his depth in the White House and knew it. The stress of doing a job he was mentally ill equipped for triggered a fatal heart attack.
CALVIN COOLIDGE slept more than any President in history, averaging twelve hours of slumber a night, supplemented by an afternoon nap every day. When he woke up to go to supper at 5 PM, he would open one eye, look at his secretary, and ask: "Is the country still here?"
HERBERT HOOVER caught all the blame for a Depression he did not cause and could not cure, but during the first six months of his Presidency he was tremendously popular, being known as "the Boy Wonder" and "the Great Engineer."
FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT was crippled by polio and spent the vast majority of his days in a wheelchair, but was so secretive about that fact that, of some 20,000 photographs taken of him while in office, only a half dozen show him in his wheelchair.
HARRY S. TRUMAN was blunt, honest, and plainspoken - he once threatened to punch out a newspaper columnist who gave his daughter's music recital a bad review.
DWIGHT EISENHOWER was a career military man whose reputation has steadily gone up since he left office. Once ranked near the bottom of U.S. Presidents, he is now in the top ten.
JOHN F. KENNEDY projected an image of youth, health, and vigor, but he was actually suffering from Addison's disease, which had nearly killed him, and excruciating back pain from an injury sustained during the war.
LYNDON BAINES JOHNSON had a car with a motor that would run in the water, turning it into a boat.. He delighted in taking journalists for a ride on his ranch, then driving into the Pedernales River just to watch them panic.
RICHARD NIXON was so poor during his college
years that he actually lived in the groundskeeper's shed, rising early every morning to shower in the gym and then go to classes.
GERALD FORD locked himself out of the White House one morning, so he sat on the steps and read the paper while waiting for the Secret Service to realize he was missing and let him back in.
JIMMY CARTER was once attacked and chased by a swamp rabbit on a fishing trip, sparking comparisons to MONTY PYTHON AND THE HOLY GRAIL.
RONALD REAGAN had such bad eyesight that he didn't recognize his son Mike at the boy's high school graduation and actually introduced himself to his own son.
GEORGE H. W. BUSH was the youngest pilot in World War II to win the Distinguished Flying Cross, but he took no pride in the decoration, because both the crewmen on his torpedo bomber were lost when the plane was shot down.
BILL CLINTON got in a bar fight as a college student while registering black voters in Oklahoma during the 1972 election.
GEORGE W. BUSH was a dyslexic who became a reader, and during his Presidency he read biographies of all his predecessors.
BARACK OBAMA served less than four years in the U.S. Senate before running for President. He was the first President born in Hawaii. (Although some still challenge this.)
DONALD TRUMP did a cameo appearance in HOME ALONE II: LOST IN NEW YORK, long before launching his own television shows.

HAPPY PRESIDENT'S DAY, everyone!
"I shall smite you in the nostrils with a rod of iron, and wax your spleen with Efferdent!!"

ER

Nixon was also a talented pianist.
What does not kill me makes me stranger.

lester1/2jr

here are the official presidential rankings

best president = none of them*

worst president = whoever the current one is

most overrated = the first one

* Caligula was okay

Allhallowsday

If you want to view paradise . . . simply look around and view it!

indianasmith

Quote from: lester1/2jr on February 17, 2020, 07:54:59 PM
here are the official presidential rankings

best president = none of them*

worst president = whoever the current one is

most overrated = the first one

* Caligula was okay

Geez, such an ass.  Go someplace where they don't have them if you hate the office so much!
"I shall smite you in the nostrils with a rod of iron, and wax your spleen with Efferdent!!"

Allhallowsday

Quote from: indianasmith on February 17, 2020, 10:22:52 PM
Quote from: lester1/2jr on February 17, 2020, 07:54:59 PM
here are the official presidential rankings
best president = none of them*
worst president = whoever the current one is
most overrated = the first one
* Caligula was okay
Geez, such an ass.  Go someplace where they don't have them if you hate the office so much!

This is America.  He can say what he wants. 

If you want to view paradise . . . simply look around and view it!

indianasmith

I know - but let's be honest; he recognized no greatness, heroism, or goodness in any of the men who have led this country when there have been abundant examples of all those characteristics. He can't even summon up one decent thing to say about any of them on the day we set aside to honor them.  It's like calling all soldiers babykillers on Veteran's Day, or attacking Jesus on Easter.  It's juvenile and irritating.
"I shall smite you in the nostrils with a rod of iron, and wax your spleen with Efferdent!!"

lester1/2jr

#7
I could move to Pennsylvania https://mises.org/library/pennsylvanias-anarchist-experiment-1681-1690

QuoteAfter Penn returned to England in 1684, the Council virtually succeeded him in governing the colony. The Council assumed full executive powers, and, since it was elected rather than appointed, this left Pennsylvania as a virtually self-governing colony. Though Thomas Lloyd, a Welsh Quaker, had by Penn been appointed as president of the Council, the president had virtually no power and could make no decisions on his own. Because the Council met very infrequently, and because no officials had any power to act in the interim, during these intervals Pennsylvania had almost no government at all

indiana - I just paid 8K to the IRS that might be coloring some of this

in the book "the Gold ring" the author gave Grant a great deal of credit for the north's victory in the civil war, which had more or less stalled out before he took over. He got taken for a ride during Black Friday, the books subject, though

VenomX73

PSH...

anyway...

happy Presidents' Day indianasmith  :thumbup:
Gilligan's island, Goonies and Godzilla information booth here!

RCMerchant

Supernatural?...perhaps. Baloney?...Perhaps not!" Bela Lugosi-the BLACK CAT (1934)
Interviewer-"Does Dracula ever end for you?
Lugosi-"No. Dracula-never ends."
Slobber, Drool, Drip!
https://www.tumblr.com/ronmerchant

indianasmith

"I shall smite you in the nostrils with a rod of iron, and wax your spleen with Efferdent!!"

indianasmith

Quote from: lester1/2jr on February 18, 2020, 12:48:42 PM
I could move to Pennsylvania https://mises.org/library/pennsylvanias-anarchist-experiment-1681-1690

QuoteAfter Penn returned to England in 1684, the Council virtually succeeded him in governing the colony. The Council assumed full executive powers, and, since it was elected rather than appointed, this left Pennsylvania as a virtually self-governing colony. Though Thomas Lloyd, a Welsh Quaker, had by Penn been appointed as president of the Council, the president had virtually no power and could make no decisions on his own. Because the Council met very infrequently, and because no officials had any power to act in the interim, during these intervals Pennsylvania had almost no government at all

indiana - I just paid 8K to the IRS that might be coloring some of this

in the book "the Gold ring" the author gave Grant a great deal of credit for the north's victory in the civil war, which had more or less stalled out before he took over. He got taken for a ride during Black Friday, the books subject, though

Grant was a brilliant general and a much better President than he was acknowledged as for many years.
He was a hundred years ahead of his time on the issue of Civil Rights, doing his best to insure blacks were allowed to vote and using Federal forces to go after the KKK throughout the South.  Sadly, the "Redeemers" simply outlasted him and waited till he left office to strip away black voting rights and institute Jim Crow laws throughout the South.

But yes, he was too trusting of his friends and got his life savings stolen by his son's business partner.
"I shall smite you in the nostrils with a rod of iron, and wax your spleen with Efferdent!!"

lester1/2jr

https://www.amazon.com/Gold-Ring-Gould-Black-Friday/dp/0786714425

author was on the committee that investigated the Hunt brothers, who attempted to corner the silver market in the 1980's


Black Friday had terrible implications for the US economy and absolutely wiped out American farmers, who the guys who led it pretended they were helping. hats how hey finnessed Grant into holding back the gold from the US treasury.

indianasmith

Although once he got wind of what they were up to, he dumped some Federal gold onto the market to keep them from succeeding in cornering the market.
That was an example of where con men used someone close to him, that he trusted (if I remember correctly it was his brother-in-law), to try and get him to go along with something criminal.
Grant's greatest fault was he gave his trust too easily, and was often betrayed.
"I shall smite you in the nostrils with a rod of iron, and wax your spleen with Efferdent!!"

lester1/2jr

 yeah that was what eventually ended it.