Grand Rental Events

Presidential Oddities

15 Feb
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This coming Monday is Presidents' Day. While that means a day off for a lot of us, the holiday was actually established to celebrate Washington's birthday. Now, it's widely considered to recognize all of the U.S. presidents. In honor of the day, here are some fun facts about our former Commanders in Chief.

  • James Polk was the first U.S. president to have his photograph taken.
  • During a low point in his acting career (circa 1954), Ronald Reagan took a standup gig in Las Vegas. It only lasted for a few weeks.
  • Theodore Roosevelt was the first president to ride in a car while in office, and his fifth cousin, FDR, was the first to ride in an airplane.
  • Thomas Jefferson had two pet bears, sent to him by Lewis and Clark during their expedition of the West. He kept them in a cage on the White House lawn, and walked them from time to time. 
  • Abraham Lincoln was also a licensed bartender. He was a co-owner of a saloon in Springfield, IL called Berry and Lincoln.
  • Warren Harding once bet the White House china collection in a poker game. He lost it all in one hand.
  • Calvin Coolidge had a mechanical horse in the White House. He used it to practice his horseback riding skills.  Coolidge also enjoyed having Vaseline rubbed on his head while eating breakfast in bed.
  • George Washington holds the record for shortest inauguration speech at less than two minutes. William Henry Harrison holds the longest at 1 hour and 40 minutes. A month after his inauguration, Harrison died from pneumonia contracted during his speech, making his the shortest term of any president.
  • During a modeling stint in college, Gerald Ford posed on the April 1942 cover of Cosmopolitan.
  • Ulysses S. Grant was given a $20 speeding ticket for riding his horse too quickly down a street in D.C. 
  • In other horse-related law breaking news, James Madison and Thomas Jefferson were once arrested together for taking an illegal carriage ride through the Vermont countryside on a Sunday.
  • Standing at 6'4", Abraham Lincoln was our tallest president. At 5'4", James Madison was the shortest.
  • Every member of Teddy Roosevelt's family owned a pair of stilts.
  • John Quincy Adams often took early morning skinny dips in the Potomac.
  • Jimmy Carter was a commander of both a nuclear submarine and a peanut farm.

For even more  presidential ridiculousness, check out this Huffington Post slideshow and this list of 99 interesting facts about the U.S. presidents at Randomhistory.com.

 

Last modified on Wednesday, 15 February 2012 19:20
Karly Kolaja

Karly Kolaja

Born in Baltimore and transplanted to the Eastern Shore, Events Editor Karly Kolaja strives to stay up to date about what’s going on in the area. Turn to her to get the inside scoop about what to do this week. To find out more about community events, or to get yours published, contact Karly.

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