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         Taylor Zachary Us President:     more detail
  1. Zachary Taylor: Twelfth President 1849-1850 (Getting to Know the Us Presidents)

41. U.S. Presidents - An English-Zone.Com Reading Activity
12, 1849 1850, +2 zachary taylor, Millard Fillmore, Whig. 16. How manytimes in history did the us have no Vice president? 17.
http://www.english-zone.com/reading/president.html
English-Zone.Com ...the BEST English-Learner's site on the 'Net!
American Presidents
Reading for Specific Purposes: Practice finding information in tables.
Use the information in the table on the left to answer the questions on the right. LEGEND: Died in office x Resigned from Presidency Assassinated in office xx Resigned from Vice Presidency Appointed Vice President (Not elected) Year President Vice President(s) Party
George Washington John Adams none
John Adams Thomas Jefferson Federalist
Thomas Jefferson Aaron Burr (to 1805)
George Clinton (to 1809) Dem-Rep
James Madison George Clinton (to 1813)
Elbridge Gerry (to 1817) Dem-Rep
James Monroe Daniel D.Tompkins Dem-Rep
John Quincy Adams John C. Calhoun Nat-Rep
Andrew Jackson John C. Calhoun(to 1833) Martin van Buren (to 1837) Democrat Martin van Buren Richard M. Johnson Democrat +1 William Harrison John Tyler Whig John Tyler No Vice President Whig James K. Polk George M. Dallas Democrat +2 Zachary Taylor Millard Fillmore Whig Millard Fillmore No Vice President Whig Franklin Pierce William R. King Democrat James Buchanan John C. Breckinridge

42. Zachary Taylor
zachary taylor. When taylor was inaugurated in March 1849, he would not take theOath of Office on a Sunday. taylor, the 12th president of the us didn t vote
http://www.geocities.com/presfacts/taylor.html
Zachary Taylor
  • When Taylor was inaugurated in March 1849, he would not take the Oath of Office on a Sunday. The offices of President and Vice President were vacant at the time, so someone had to be the president, but who? David Rice Atchison, the President Pro Tempore of the Senate, was sworn in as president. He did not do much, when asked, he said, "I went to bed. There had been two or three busy nights finishing up the work of the Senate, and I slept most of that Sunday."
  • Taylor was a second cousin of James Madison, a fourth cousin once removed of Robert E. Lee, and a fourth cousin three times removed of Franklin D. Roosevelt.
  • Taylor's body was recently exhumed because some thought that his death was caused by murder instead of natural causes.
  • Taylor spent July 4, 1850, eating cherries and milk at a ceremony at the Washington Monument. He got sick from the heat and died five days later, the second president to die in office.
  • Taylor refused all postage due correspondences. Because of this, he didn't receive notification of his nomination for president until several days later.
  • Taylor kept his old warhorse named Whitney on the White House lawn. People would pluck hairs from it for souveniers.

43. President Zachary Taylor
The Personal Memoirs of us Grant Part One The Early Years, West Point, Mexico (Unabridged)by K. Jack Bauer. zachary taylor, 12th president of the United
http://www.searchforsales.com/taylor.html
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Zachary Taylor: Soldier, Planter, Statesman of the Old Southwest
by K. Jack Bauer
01 August, 1993 List Price:
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The Personal Memoirs of U.S. Grant: Part One: The Early Years, West Point, Mexico (Unabridged)

by K. Jack Bauer List Price: Amazon's Low Price: You Save: Zachary Taylor by Robin S. Doak 01 March, 2003 List Price: Amazon's Low Price: You Save: Zachary Taylor: Our Twelfth President by Carol Brunelli 01 September, 2001 List Price: Amazon's Low Price: You Save: Zachary Taylor: America's 12th President by Deborah Kops 01 March, 2004 List Price: Amazon's Low Price: You Save: Three Kentucky Presidents: Lincoln, Taylor, Davis by Holman Hamilton 01 August, 1978 List Price: Amazon's Low Price: You Save: Zachary Taylor by James M. Deem 01 May, 2002 List Price: Amazon's Low Price: You Save: Zachary Taylor, 12th President of the United States

44. Search By U.S. President @ SchoolAtlas
taylor, zachary @ POTus Comprehensive resources on zachary taylor, includingelection results Considered by many to be the most significant us president.
http://www.schoolatlas.com/search2/Government/U_S_Presidents/Search_by_President
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College Search Here: Academic Websites Yahoo! Google Ask Jeeves About.com Alta Vista Lycos Excite HotBot Infoseek Northern Light DejaNews Lawcrawler Metacrawler Look Smart Government U.S. Presidents Search by President
  • Madison, James @ POTUS -Comprehensive resources on James Madison, including election results,biography,cabinet members,notable events,historical documents, and more.
  • Jackson, Andrew @ POTUS -Comprehensive resources on Andrew Jackson, including election results,biography,cabinet members,notable events,historical documents, and more.
  • Taylor, Zachary @ POTUS -Comprehensive resources on Zachary Taylor, including election results,biography,cabinet members,notable events,historical documents, and more.
  • Cleveland, Grover @ POTUS -Comprehensive resources on Grover Cleveland, including election results,biography,cabinet members,notable events,historical documents, and more.
  • Harrison, William Henry
  • 45. Zachary Taylor - Encyclopedia Article About Zachary Taylor. Free Access, No Regi
    9, 1850 March 4, 1853 Followed zachary taylor Succeeded by lawyer Political PartyWhig Vice president none January 14 - The us Congress ratifies the Treaty
    http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Zachary Taylor
    Dictionaries: General Computing Medical Legal Encyclopedia
    Zachary Taylor
    Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition Zachary Taylor Order: 12th President Term of Office: March 5 March 5 is the 64th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (65th in leap years). There are 301 days remaining.
    Events
    11th century
    • 1046 - Naser Khosrow begins his "itinerary" which he would later describe in Safarnameh
    17th century
    • 1689 - Daniel Finch, 2nd Earl of Nottingham named Secretary of State for the Northern Department.

    Click the link for more information. Centuries: 18th century - 19th century - 20th century Decades: 1790s 1800s 1810s 1820s 1830s - Years: 1844 1845 1846 1847 1848 -
    Events
    • January 23 - Elizabeth Blackwell is awarded her MD by the Medical Institute of Geneva, New York, thus becoming the United States' first woman doctor

    Click the link for more information. July 9 July 9 is the 190th day of the year (191st in leap years) in the Gregorian Calendar, with 175 days remaining.
    Events
    • 455 - Roman military commander Avitus is proclaimed emperor of the western Roman Empire.
    • 1540 - Henry VIII of England annulled his marriage to his fourth wife, Anne of Cleves.

    46. Explore DC: Zachary Taylor
    us presidents Profiles, zachary taylor, zachary taylor s entire careerbefore becoming president was in the military, and he was
    http://www.exploredc.org/index.php?id=85

    47. Zachery Taylor
    Biographical Notes. taylor, zachary (17841850), us general in the MexicanWar, who became the 12th president of the United States (1849-50).
    http://www.bellenet.com/taylorzachary.html
    Zachary Taylor Profile: U.S. General/President Birthdate: November 24, 1784 Died: Birthplace: Orange Co, Virginia Credits: (See Below) Biographical Notes Taylor, Zachary (1784-1850), U.S. general in the Mexican War, who became the 12th president of the United States (1849-50). Taylor was born on November 24, 1784, in Orange County, Virginia, the son of a veteran of the American Revolution. Taken to Kentucky as a child, he grew up on his father's plantation near Louisville, where he was educated by local tutors. He was married (1810) to Margaret Mackall Smith of Maryland, with whom he had four children; one of these was the first wife of Jefferson Davis , later Confederate president; another became a Confederate general. In 1808 Taylor joined the regular army as an infantry officer. After distinguishing himself under William Henry Harrison in the War of 1812 and briefly returning to civilian life, he saw active duty on various frontier posts in the Northwest and Louisiana, where he established a second home. He participated in the Black Hawk and Second Seminole wars and in 1838 defeated the Seminole in the Battle of Lake Okeechobee. Although not decisive, this engagement earned him promotion to the rank of brigadier general, and he was given overall command of the campaign against the Seminole in Florida. Taylor, who had never bothered to vote, had little political experience, but he had quarreled with President James K. Polk and sympathized with the Whigs, and thus seemed a perfect candidate for the opposition. Although he declared himself nonpartisan and was a slave owner, which might have made him unpopular in the North, the Whig party nominated him for the presidency in 1848. In the ensuing election, he defeated both his Democratic and Free-Soil opponents.

    48. Religious Affiliation Of U.S. Presidents
    12, zachary taylor, Episcopalian. Of all us presidents, however, many historiansconsider Johnson the least religious, and the president who was least
    http://www.fundraising-ideas.org/orgs/churches/presidents.htm
    Fundraising
    Newsletter Do-It-Yourself Fundraising Return Home
    Religious Affiliation of U.S. Presidents Keep in mind that in the table above, the % of the U.S. population for religious groups are current figures. Religious groups have had much different proportions at various time in U.S. history. One of the most over-represented religious groups among U.S. presidents is Unitarianism. The combined proportion of Unitarian Universalists in the U.S. population is just 0.2% of the population (one in every 500 Americans). Yet there have been 4 Unitarian presidents. On the other end of the scale, the most under-represented religious group is Catholicism, which has had only one U.S. president (John F. Kennedy), despite making up 26% of the current U.S. population. Major religious groups in the U.S. which have never had a U.S. president include: Lutherans (about 5% of the U.S. population); Jews (about 2% of the U.S. population); Latter-day Saints (2%); Pentecostals (about 1.8 %); Muslims (approx. 1 to 1.5%); Eastern Orthodox (approx. 1%); and Churches of Christ (1%). Denomination Number of
    Presidents Percent of
    Presidents Percent of
    Current
    U.S. Pop.

    49. U.S. President's - 1845 To 1881
    Major; Also served Vice president for zachary taylor New York Legislature(18291831) us Congress (1833-1835), (1837-1843); Vice
    http://www.russpickett.com/ushist/uspres2.htm

    Polk
    Taylor Fillmore Pierce ... Garfield
    th President "
    (March 4, 1845 to March 3, 1849)
    1 Term
    49 years old, Presbyterian, Lawyer, Democrat
    • Born:
        November 2, 1795, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina
    • Died:
        June 15, 1849, Nashville, Tennesse (Chronic Diarrhea - 53)
    • Interred:
        State Capitol Grounds, Nashville, Tennessee
    • Parents:
    • Married:
        Sarah Childress on January 1, 1824
    • Children:
        None
    • Education:
        University of North Carolina
    • Military Service:
        Colonel
    • Also served:
        Tennessee Legislature (1823-1825)
        Governor of Tennessee (1839-1841)
        U.S. Congress (1825-1839) - (Speaker of the House)
    • Vice President:
        George M. Dallas of Pennsylvania
    • Facts:
      • Was the first man to become President while in his 40's
      • President during the Mexican-American War.
      • President during the California gold rush.
      • Nickname: "Young Hickory"
    • Famous Quote:
        "Public opinion: May it always perform one of its appropriate offices, by teaching the public functionaries of the State and of the Federal Government, that neither shall assume the exercise of powers entrusted by the Constitution to the other."
    • Links:
      th President " (March 4, 1849 to July 9, 1850)

    50. Facts Concerning More Than One President
    Nine us Presidents never went to college George Washington, Andrew Jackson, MartinVan Buren, zachary taylor, Millard Fillmore, Abraham Lincoln, Andrew Johnson
    http://scican.net/~dkochan/all.html
    Facts Concerning More than One President
    • Throughout its history, the White House has been known as the "President's Palace," the "President's House," and the "Executive Mansion." President Theodore Roosevelt officially gave the White House its current name in 1901.
    • Four of the first six U.S. Presidents were age 57 when they were inaugurated. Washington, Jefferson, Madison and Adams. They were also the last U.S. Presidents to be inaugurated at that age.
    • Six U.S. Presidents were professional soldiers: Washington, Jackson, William Henry Harrison, Taylor, Grant, and Eisenhower.
    • U.S. President Calvin Coolidge (30th) was born on July 4, 1872. Presidents John Adams (2nd) and Thomas Jefferson (3rd) both died on July 4, 1826. President James Monroe (5th) died on July 4, 1831.
    • Three Whigs have served as President of the United States: William Henry Harrison, Zachary Taylor, and Millard Fillmore.
    • No building in Washington, D.C. may be taller than 13 floors. This is so that no matter where in the city you are, you can see the Washington Monument.
    • More presidents have been born in Virgina then any other state. Washington, Jefferson, Madison, Monroe, William Henery Harrison, Tyler, and Wilson.

    51. Zachary Taylor Arkansas Encyclopedia Of Arkansas Arkansas History State Of Arkan
    zachary taylor was succeeded by his vice president, Millard Fillmore. Relatedarticles. us presidential election, 1848. External links. Inaugural Address.
    http://anythingarkansas.com/arkapedia/pedia/Zachary_Taylor/
    Home Free Offers Directory A ... Z
    Zachary Taylor
    Zachary Taylor (November 24 - July 9 ), also known as "Old Rough and Ready", was the 12th ( President of the United States , and the second President to die in office.
    Family
    On June 21, 1810, Zachary Taylor married Margaret Mackall Smith (1788-1852), known as Peggy. Together, they had five girls and one boy. Two of the girls died young in 1820. Once Zachary Taylor became President, Mrs. Taylor received guests gracefully. However, their daughter, Mary Elizabeth, then 25, fulfilled the duties of official White House hostess. Their children were:
  • Anne Mackall Taylor - April 9, 1811-December 2, 1875 (married Dr. Robert C. Wood, a surgeon of the United States Army)
  • Sarah Knox Taylor - March 6, 1814-September 15, 1825 (married Lt. Jefferson Davis, future President of the Confederacy on June 17, 1835)
  • Octavia Taylor - August 15, 1816-September 1820
  • Margret Smith Taylor - July 17, 1819-September 1820
  • Mary Elizabeth Taylor - April 20, 1824-July 25, 1909 (married Major William Bliss, U.S.A., and later Philip Dandridge, of Virginia)
  • Richard Taylor - January 27, 1826-April 17, 1879 (married Sarah Dabney Strother and served as a general in the Confederate Army)
  • 52. Modern History Sourcebook: Inaugural Addresses Of US Presidents
    are located at the University of Oklahoma Chronology of us Historical Documents JamesK. Polk 1845; Inaugural Address of president zachary taylor 1849;
    http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/presidents-inaugurals.html
    Back to Modern History SourceBook
    Modern History Sourcebook:
    Inaugural Addresses of US Presidents
    It has been a tradition for each US President to begin each term of office with a speech at his inauguration. A few of these speeches give real insight into a presidency, or that state of the country at the time. Others are more quotidien. The more important ones are highlighted below. All these texts are located at the University of Oklahoma Chronology of US Historical Documents site.

    53. GuruNet Topic: Taylor, Zachary
    zachary taylor, 12th us president A hero of the war with Mexico in 1846,zachary taylor was the first us president who was regular army .
    http://lookup.gurunet.com/gurunet/query?prodid=basic&cid=1624688917&nogray=80750

    54. Bloomington South Wrestling Club
    zachary taylor. The 12th president of the United States of America, zachary taylorwas also a wrestler similar to the style and way of George Washington.
    http://www.bloomington.in.us/~southmat/famous.html
    Famous Wrestlers
    George Washington
    The 1st President of the United States of America George Washington was first a champion wrestler. At 18, the big, shy Washington apparently held a ''collar and elbow'' wrestling championship that was at least county-wide and possibly colony-wide. Washington never lost his touch. At the age of 47, ten years before he became the first President of the United States, the Commander of the Continental Armies still had enough left to defeat seven consecutive challengers from the Massachusetts Volunteers. The ''collar and elbow'' style devised its name from the starting position. Standing face-to-face, each wrestler placed one hand behind his opponent's neck and the other behind his elbow. While doing away with such tactics as bull-like rushes, the position opened up many possible skill maneuvers.
    Andrew Jackson
    The 7th President of the United States of America, Andrew Jackson was also a wrestler similar to the style and way of George Washington.
    Zachary Taylor
    The 12th President of the United States of America, Zachary Taylor was also a wrestler similar to the style and way of George Washington. Taylor never wrestled against Lincoln, but he was a skilled competitor in collar and elbow during his service with the Illinois Volunteers for the Black Hawk uprising. He always favored wrestling as an army sport.

    55. People In History - Zachary Taylor DeMar
    Ten children were born to the DeMars, the last one, ZT DeMar in 1848, perhaps namedin honor of zachary taylor (Mexican War victor, and later us president).
    http://www.indianhill.org/History/Ppl005.htm
    Indian Hill Historical Society
    8100 Given Road
    Cincinnati, Ohio 45243 "Keeping Indian Hill's past and present alive for tomorrow"
    Zachary Taylor DeMar
    One of the pioneer families of present day Indian Hill was the DeMar clan, and their youngest offspring, Zachary Taylor DeMar, made a positive mark on all who encountered him. Arriving in Cincinnati in 1828 from Maryland, the extended DeMar family moved to the hill in 1833, where relatives built homes on Walton Creek Rd., DeMar Rd., and the corner of Miami and Graves Rd. James and Jane DeMar constructed a log cabin - basically two rooms and a loft - and as their family grew, the cabin was enlarged. Ten children were born to the DeMars, the last one, Z.T. DeMar in 1848, perhaps named in honor of Zachary Taylor (Mexican War victor, and later U.S. President). During the Civil War a kitchen wing was added to the homestead and in the 1880's 15 acres of additional farmland were purchased for $33 per acre. Three of Zachary's brothers (James, Isaac, and John) served in the Union Army during the Civil War, after enlisting and training at Camp Dennison, leaving Zachary (age 12) at home. Two of the young men did not survive, and John's grave at Armstrong Chapel Cemetery is designated as that of a Civil War veteran.

    56. Zachary Taylor
    president zachary taylor and the Laboratory presidential Visit from the Grave. Shortly after breaking ground for the Washington Monument on July 4, 1850, president zachary taylor, a hero of the Mexican War, fell ill. 1991 one convinced taylor's descendants that the president might have suffered
    http://www.ornl.gov/ORNLReview/rev27-12/text/ansside6.html
    President Zachary Taylor and the Laboratory:
    Presidential Visit from the Grave
    Shortly after breaking ground for the Washington Monument on July 4, 1850, President Zachary Taylor, a hero of the Mexican War, fell ill. When he died suddenly a few days later, the cause was listed as gastroenteritisinflammation of the stomach and intestines. Some historians suspected that Taylor's death may have had other causes, and in 1991 one convinced Taylor's descendants that the president might have suffered arsenic poisoning. As a result, Taylor's remains were exhumed from a cemetery in Louisville and Kentucky's medical examiner brought samples of hair and fingernail tissue to Oak Ridge National Laboratory for study. In the Chemical and Analytical Sciences Division , Larry Robinson and Frank Dyer headed the Taylor investigation, using neutron activation analysis to measure the amount of arsenic in the hair and nail samples. After placing the samples in a beam of neutrons from the High Flux Isotope Reactor , Dyer and Robinson looked at the gamma rays coming from the samples for the distinctive energy levels associated with the presence of arsenic. Arsenic is among the easier elements to identify through neutron activation and can be detected in a few parts per million. Most human bodies contain traces of arsenic, so the essential issue in the Taylor case was whether the samples from Taylor contained more arsenic than would be normal after 141 years in the crypt. Working late in the evenings, Dyer and Robinson in a few days calculated the arsenic levels in the samples and sent them to the Kentucky medical examiner for his decision. After reviewing the test results, the examiner announced that the arsenic levels in the samples were several hundred times less than they would have been if the president had been poisoned with arsenic. This finding acquitted several of Taylor's prominent contemporaries of the suspicion of murder and proved that history and science share a common quest for truth.

    57. Remembering President Zachary Taylor
    Article reflects on taylor's darker legacy.
    http://wfmu.org/~davem/docs/ztaylor.html
    Remembering President Zachary Taylor
    by Dave Mandl
    Considering the brevity of his stay in the White House (just under seven weeks), Zachary Taylor's spectacular legend seems grotesquely exaggerated, like the work of some crazed pre-Civil War spin doctor. But if anything, the reputation of our twelfth president has been muted in the century and a half since his death. Surrounded by controversy and swirls of almost unbelievable rumor since before he learned to walk, Taylor was the philanderer that JFK could only dream of being, twice the lush that Benjamin Harrison ever was. On a slow day, he was a bigger crook than Nixon, a worse gambler than James K. Polk, and more of an insufferable whining brat than George Bush. Few people are aware of this today. His election to the highest office in the land was, naturally, a fluke. In an effort to make something of himself and earn the respect of his friends, he half-heartedly declared his candidacy for president in the 1849 election. This was treated as a joke among his acquaintances, who suggested the campaign slogan "A muskrat in every pot." His opponent, Samuel Gates, was an enormously popular Governor who was running unopposed, and whose victory was a virtual shoo-in. Zachary's announced candidacy did nothing to change this; a poll taken two weeks before the election projected that 98.9% of the popular vote would go to Gates. And so it probably would haveif he hadn't been accidentally ground to a pulp in a wheat-threshing machine at a campaign stop on the eve of the election.

    58. American President
    Fact file and comprehensive biographical sketch based on PBS series.
    http://www.americanpresident.org/history/zacharytaylor/
    Your name Email City State Question Presidency in History Zachary Taylor Biography A Life in Brief document.write(""); Presidency in History Biography First Lady Cabinet ... Presidency in Action search: Zachary Taylor (1849-1850) 12th President of the United States
    Vice President : Millard Fillmore
    Born : November 24, 1784, near Barboursville, Virginia
    Nickname : "Old Rough and Ready"
    Religion : Episcopalian
    Marriage : June 21, 1810, to Margaret Mackall Smith (1788-1852)
    Children : Ann Mackall Taylor (1811-1875), Sarah Knox Taylor (1814-1835), Octavia P. Taylor (1816-1820), Margaret Smith Taylor (1819-1820), Mary Elizabeth Taylor (1824-1909), Richard Taylor (1826-1879)
    Career : Soldier
    Political Party : Whig
    Writings Letters of Zachary Taylor
    Died : July 9, 1850, Washington, D.C. Buried : Zachary Taylor National Cemetery, near Louisville, KY Consulting Editor Michael F. Holt, University of Virginia Biography: A Life in Brief At the time he became President, Zachary Taylor was the most popular man in America, a hero of the Mexican-American War. He was probably not the right man, however, for the job at a time when Americans were confronting the explosive issue of slavery. Taylor was a wealthy slave owner who held properties in the plantation states of Louisiana, Kentucky, and Mississippi. During his brief time in office (he died only sixteen months after his election), his presidency foundered over the question of whether the national government should permit the spread of slavery to the present-day states of California, New Mexico, and Utah, then newly won from Mexico. His sudden death put Vice President Millard Fillmore into the White House, and Fillmore promptly threw his support behind the Compromise of 1850, canceling out much of the impact of Taylor's presidency.

    59. Historians Find 1814 Assault Indictment Of Ex-President Zachary Taylor
    CNN
    http://cnn.com/2002/LAW/07/18/zachary.taylor.indictment.ap/index.html

    60. US Presidents: Lists And Records
    cousin three times removed of zachary taylor, fifth cousin Note Several presidentswere allegedly of mixed and African ancestry, which by us reckoning would
    http://www.heptune.com/preslist.html
    US Presidents: Lists and Records The presidents of the United States are so much fun. Understanding them helps us understand American history. We have compiled a series of lists about the presidents, and will be adding more as we think of new categories.
    Contents:
    Presidential birthplaces
    Presidents born before the USA became a country:
    • George Washington John Adams Thomas Jefferson James Madison James Monroe John Quincy Adams Andrew Jackson William Henry Harrison
    Presidents born in Arkansas
    • Bill Clinton
    Presidents born in California
    • Richard Nixon
    Presidents born in the Carolinas
    • Andrew Jackson (historians are not sure whether he was born in North or South Carolina) James Polk (North Carolina) Andrew Johnson (North Carolina)
    Presidents born in Connecticut
    • George W. Bush
    Presidents born in Georgia
    • Jimmy Carter
    Presidents born in Illinois
    • Ronald Reagan
    Presidents born in Iowa
    • Herbert Hoover
    Presidents born in Kentucky
    • Abraham Lincoln
    Presidents born in Massachusetts
    • John Adams John Quincy Adams John Kennedy George Bush
    Presidents born in Missouri
    • Harry Truman
    Presidents born in Nebraska
    • Gerald Ford
    Presidents born in New Hampshire
    • Franklin Pierce
    Presidents born in New Jersey
    • Grover Cleveland
    Presidents born in New York
    • Martin Van Buren Millard Fillmore Theodore Roosevelt Franklin Roosevelt
    Presidents born in Ohio
    • Ulysses Grant Rutherford Hayes James Garfield Benjamin Harrison William McKinley William Taft Warren Harding
    Presidents born in Pennsylvania
    • James Buchanan
    Presidents born in Texas

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