The Presidents Page Warren G. Harding. StrangeDeaths of president Harding, The. WarrenG. benjaminharrison. benjamin harrison ihs1830.org. benjaminharrison k12.fl.us. http://www.ridgewood.k12.nj.us/WWW/BF/library/9798/presidents.html
Extractions: A resource for students, parents, and teachers. P R E S I D E N T S on the Internet General Links: American Experience: The Presidents American Presidency,The Presidents of the United States- POTUS John Adams JohnAdams [whitehouse.gov] Reporton President John Adams John Quincy Adams America'sChrisitan Rulers: John Quincy Adams Educationof John Quincy Adams JohnQuincy Adams [whitehouse.gov] Chester A. Arthur 21st U.S.President: Chester A. Arthur Chester A.Arthur [ocps.k12.fl] ChesterA. Arthur [whitehouse.gov] IPL POTUS ChesterAlan Arthur James Buchanan Buchanan's Birthplace StatePark Buchanan, James IPL POTUS JamesBuchanan JamesBuchanan [whitehouse.gov] ... Reporton James Buchanan George Bush George Bush [HaakonLindekleiv] GeorgeBush [whitehouse.gov] GeorgeBush Presidential Library@ Jimmy Carter JimmyCarter [Carter Center] JimmyCarter [whitehouse.gov] Jimmy CarterLibrary Grover Cleveland Cleveland,Grover GroverCleveland [whitehouse.gov] Bill Clinton Calvin Coolidge Calvin Coolidge CalvinCoolidge Dwight Eisenhower DwightD. Eisenhower EisenhowerCenter Eisenhower'sWar Millard Fillmore AcademicAmerican Encyclopedia: Millard Fillmore Fillmore, Millard[elections.eb.com]
Extractions: Berkeley, on the James River between Williamsburg and Richmond, is the birthplace of a signer of the Declaration of Independence and a U.S. President. Benjamin Harrison, son of the builder of Berkeley and the plantation's second owner, was a signer of the Declaration of Independence and three-time Governor of Virginia. William Henry Harrison, Benjamin's third son, born at Berkeley, was the famous Indian fighter known as "Tippecanoe," who later became the ninth President of the United States, in 1841. His grandson, Benjamin Harrison, was the 23rd President. On December 4, 1619, early settlers from England came ashore at Berkeley and observed the first official Thanksgiving in America. At Berkeley the date of the building, 1726, and the initials of the owners, Benjamin Harrison IV and his wife, Anne, appear in a datestone over a side door. The early Georgian mansion is said to be the oldest 3-story brick house in Virginia that can prove its date and the first with a pediment roof. The original mansion, built in 1726 of brick fired on the plantation, occupies a beautifully landscaped hilltop site overlooking the historic James River. The handsome Adam woodwork and the double arches of the "Great Rooms" in the mansion were installed by Benjamin Harrison VI in 1790 at the direction of Thomas Jefferson. The rooms in Berkeley are furnished with a magnificent collection of eighteenth century antiques.
President Benjamin Harrison Home president benjamin harrison Home, Overall Site Score 4. Indianapolis, IN usA http//www.surfici.com/harrison/. Pleasee-mail us about the museum websites you http://www.musee-online.org/rate.cgi?President Benjamin Harrison Home
Archaeology benjamin harrison (23rd us president). benjamin harrison (Whitehouse), Americanpresidents Life Portraits. benjamin harrison Inaugural Address. http://cavern.nmsu.edu/Library/referencedesk/america_presidents.htm
Extractions: john quincy adams (6th president) Inaugural Address American Presidents: Life Portraits Like Father, Like Son: Presidential Families Biography Gerald Ford (38th President) American Presidents: Life Portraits Gerald R. Ford (1913- ) James Abram Garfield (20th president) Alexander Graham Bell and the Garfield Assassination How Alexander Graham Bell Helped Biographical Sketch Benjamin Harrison (23rd US President) Benjamin Harrison (Whitehouse) American Presidents: Life Portraits Benjamin Harrison: Inaugural Address herbert hoover (31st president) Teaching with Historic Places Biography Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum Abraham Lincoln (16th President) Abraham Lincoln Research Site The Internet Public Library Potus: Abraham Lincoln Abraham Lincoln Papers ... Biography of Abraham Lincoln william howard taft (27th president) World Almanac for Kids Online Biography William Howard Taft: Inaugural Address george washington (1st US President) American Memory Fellows Program Buttons for General Washington George Washington's Birthday
U.S. Presidents Who Were Related To Each Other fifth cousin of Theodore Roosevelt (the 26th president). a total of 11 us presidents,5 Ulysses Grant, William Henry harrison, benjamin harrison, James Madison http://www.factmonster.com/ipka/A0878156.html
Extractions: Almanac United States United States Government Presidents George W. Bush (the 43rd president) is the son of George Bush (the 41st president). John Quincy Adams (the 6th president) was the son of John Adams (the 2nd president). Benjamin Harrison (the 23rd president) was the grandson of William Henry Harrison (the 9th president). James Madison (the 4th president) and Zachary Taylor (the 12th president) were second cousins. Franklin Delano Roosevelt (the 32nd president) was a fifth cousin of Theodore Roosevelt (the 26th president). Genealogists have determined that FDR was distantly related to a total of 11 U.S. presidents, 5 by blood and 6 by marriage: John Adams, John Quincy Adams, Ulysses Grant, William Henry Harrison, Benjamin Harrison, James Madison, Theodore Roosevelt, William Taft, Zachary Taylor, Martin Van Buren, and George Washington.
PresidentS Resource Fort benjamin harrison. Schools harrison Elementary School in us Labor History in1920's during Harding's presidency; The United States Secret Service http://www.ibiblio.org/lia/president/pressites/PresidentS-list2.html
Baseball Almanac - Presidential Famous Firsts 0606-1892, president benjamin harrison is the first us president to attend aMajor League baseball game AND the first to see an extra inning game as the http://www.baseball-almanac.com/firsts/prz_1st.shtml
Extractions: Support Baseball Almanac - Visit One Sponsor Each Visit Advertise Here Contact Us Our Newsletter Support Our Efforts ... Year In Review "I like the job I have now, but if I had my life to live over again, I'd like to have ended up a sportswriter." - President Richard Milhouse Nixon T he Presidents of the United States have embraced baseball since George Washington played rounders at Valley Forge! B aseball Almanac has researched the presidential-baseball relationships and is proud to present a historical breakdown of famous firsts as they relate to baseball and U.S. Presidents. The Presidents of the United States Famous Baseball Firsts Date Event Description President Andrew Johnson brought the first organized baseball team (referred to as "a delegation of the National Base Ball Club) to the White House / Presidential Mansion for a visit. View the paper on Baseball Fever today!
American Presidents History Resources History of the Presidency us presidents. Ulysses S. Grant Network. The StrangeDeaths of president Harding by Robert H. Ferrell. benjamin harrison. http://www.snowcrest.net/jmike/ampres.html
Notable Graves Grant, us, us president, New York, NY * H Top. harrison, benjamin, uspresident, Indianapolis, IN. Hawthorne, Nathaniel, Author, Concord, MA. http://www.oldbones.net/html_java/notabletext.htm
HistoryLink Database Output us president benjamin harrison visits Tacoma on May 6, 1891. On May 6,1891, us president benjamin harrison (18331901) visits Tacoma. http://www.historylink.org/output.CFM?file_ID=4099
Oaklea Middle School - Biographies The White House president's Hall. Lists of us presidents. H Back to Top Hale,Nathan Hamilton, Alexander harrison, benjamin harrison, William Henry. http://www.junctioncity.k12.or.us/Oaklea/biography.htm
Extractions: Biographies of famous historical Americans Famous Women in History ... Famous People who have been honored on Postal Stamps US President Sites Back to Top The White House: President's Hall PBS American Experience: The Presidents Lists of US Presidents ... PresidentS Directory Alphabetical Individual Biography List Back to Top A Back to Top Adams, John
Extractions: William Henry Harrison: A Presidential Unit William Henry Harrison, the 9th US President, was born 9 Feb 1773 in Virginia. He was one of very few presidents whose was elected while in the Whig political party. He served the shortest term in office only thirty-two days before his death due to pneumonia. Political Party: Whig William Henry Harrison was a descendant of a prominent Virginia family. His early schooling was at home. He left college before graduation to study medicine. When his father died, he joined the army. After seven years of military career he entered politics. As governor of the Indiana Territory he was victorious agains the Native Americans at the Battle of Tippecanoe, and again showed his military skill in the War of 1812. After that war he resigned again from military life. He ran his farm, was a state and US senator and a diplomat. He was unsuccessful in 1836 in his bid for the presidency, but in 1840 he won on the slogan Tippecanoe and Tyler Too. He caught cold at his inauguration. It turned into pneumonia and he died after only thirty-two days in office. He was not president long enough to put any programs into effect, so it is difficult to say if he was a successful president.
Crouse Autograph Collection - Search Results harrison, benjamin (1833 1901) American Politician. Born in North Bend,Ohio. Senator from Indiana and 23rd president of the us from 188993. http://crouse.cromaine.org/SearchResults.asp?termID=112
BENJAMIN HARRISON harrison, benjamin; b North Bend, Ohio, 20 Aug 1833; educ Delegn to Republican NatConventn 1880, us Senator from Indiana 188187, 23rd president (R) of http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/contents/book/america/fhp/apf/fhp-APF-HARRIS
Extractions: BENJAMIN HARRISON HARRISON, BENJAMIN b North Bend, Ohio, 20 Aug 1833; educ This Country of Ours Public Papers and Addresses of Benjamin Harrison m 1st Oxford, Ohio, 20 Oct 1853 Caroline (Carrie) Lavinia ( b d the White House 25 Oct 1892 of tuberculosis; bur Crown Hill Cemetery, Indianapolis, Ind.), 3rd dau of Revd Dr John Witherspoon Scott, Presbyterian Min and Prof of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, Miami U, and his w Mary Potts, dau of John Neal, and had issue: Thomas Harrison, of Gobion's Manor, Northamptonshire, England;
23rd President Of The U.S. Morton served in the us House Of Representatives (18791881) and as us minister toFrance (1881-1885). He was vice president under benjamin harrison from 1889 http://www.consultawebsurfer.com/states/presidents/23bh.html
Extractions: A Republican, Morton served in the U.S. House Of Representatives (1879-1881) and as U.S. minister to France (1881-1885). He was vice president under Benjamin Harrison from 1889 to 1893. As governor of New York (1895-1896), Morton worked for civil-service reform, supported the consolidation of New York City, and remained independent of the Republican state machine. In 1899 he organized the Morton Trust Company, which merged with the Guaranty Trust Company in 1909, when he retired. He died in Rhinebeck, N.Y., on May 16, 1920. Did you know. . . ? John D. Rockefeller (1839-1937), He was worth more than a billion dollars when a billion dollars meant something. In fact, John Davison Rockefeller was the very first U.S. billionaire, building his pile on the monolithic Standard Oil Co. A fierce conniver, he slashed costs and dodged antitrust rulings. Then, at age 58 (1897), after three decades as an oilman, the religious robber baron turned to charity. In his lifetime he spent $540 million, the equivalent of $5.6 billion in 1999, on projects primarily in medical research and education. He died at 97, having never smoked a cigar or drunk a glass of champagne, leaving behind a vast fortune and a family active in many spheres of politics, philanthropy, and business.
U.S. Presidents 18811885, Enacted the first comprehensive us civil service Lost rebid, but re-electedast 24th president. harrison, benjamin, 1833-1901, 1889-1893, Grandson of http://www.redshift.com/~kapsalis/presidents_us.html
Extractions: For more details on all the Presidents visit encarta.msn.com lifespan term remarks Washington, George Created the Continental Army, which won the American Revolution (1775-1783) Adams, John First Vice President of the United States. Jefferson, Thomas Author of the Declaration of Independence. Madison, James Considered responsible for making the Bill of Rights part of the Constitution. Monroe, James Responsible for the Monroe Doctrine. Adams, John Quincy Served as a diplomat, senator, secretary of state, president, and, for the last 17 years of his life, a U.S. Representative. Jackson, Andrew First Westerner to be elected president. Van Buren, Martin He was the first ex-president to visit outside the United States. Harrison, William Henry First president to die in office, and his administration, which lasted exactly one month, was the shortest in U.S. history. Tyler, John First vice president to become President upon the death of the President. Polk, James Knox During his one term in office the United States expanded westward to the Pacific Ocean, California and the New Mexico Territory were won in the Mexican War, and the Oregon country was acquired through negotiations with Great Britain. Taylor, Zachary
Inaugural Address Of President Benjamin Harrison March 4, 1889 Inaugural Address of president benjamin harrison March 4, 1889 Fellow The first inaugurationof president Washington took place they will not expect us to look http://www.multied.com/documents/Harrisonjr.html
Extractions: THERE is no constitutional or legal requirement that the President shall take the oath of office in the presence of the people, but there is so manifest an appropriateness in the public induction to office of the chief executive officer of the nation that from the beginning of the Government the people, to whose service the official oath consecrates the officer, have been called to witness the solemn ceremonial. The oath taken in the presence of the people becomes a mutual covenant. The officer covenants to serve the whole body of the people by a faithful execution of the laws, so that they may be the unfailing defense and security of those who respect and observe them, and that neither wealth, station, nor the power of combinations shall be able to evade their just penalties or to wrest them from a beneficent public purpose to serve the ends of cruelty or selfishness. Petitions poured in upon Congress urging the imposition of discriminating duties that should encourage the production of needed things at home. The patriotism of the people, which no longer found afield of exercise in war, was energetically directed to the duty of equipping the young Republic for the defense of its independence by making its people self-dependent. Societies for the promotion of home manufactures and for encouraging the use of domestics in the dress of the people were organized in many of the States. The revival at the end of the century of the same patriotic interest in the preservation and development of domestic industries and the defense of our working people against injurious foreign competition is an incident worthy of attention. It is not a departure but a return that we have witnessed. The protective policy had then its opponents. The argument was made, as now, that its benefits inured to particular classes or sections.