IPL POTUS -- Presidents Of The United States Thomas Jefferson, 18011809; james madison, 1809-1817; james james Earl Carter, Jr.,1977-1981; Ronald Wilson us Presidents Books DVD Video cover Truman by http://www.potus.com/
Extractions: Welcome! In this resource you will find background information, election results, cabinet members, notable events, and some points of interest on each of the presidents. Links to biographies, historical documents, audio and video files, and other presidential sites are also included. Select the president you want information about from the list below. If you don't know which president you are interested in, perhaps the name or subject indexes will help. They are listed at the bottom of the page. This site is always growing and changing. If you have suggestions or comments, send e-mail to suggestions@potus.com . Questions can be sent to potus@ipl.org . Thanks for visiting. Apr 09, 2003 On this day in POTUS History General Robert E. Lee and General Ulysses S. Grant signed terms of Confederate surrender ending the Civil War. George Washington, 1789-1797 John Adams, 1797-1801 Thomas Jefferson, 1801-1809 James Madison, 1809-1817 ... George Walker Bush, 2001- POTUS Store
Biographies Of The Presidents HistoryHistory and Government—us Presidents Biographies of the Presidents.George Washington. John Adams. Thomas Jefferson. james madison. james Monroe. http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0760585.html
Genealogy Of The US Presidents The Whitehouse also supplies us Government Information about the Presidents. Washington;17971801 John Adams; 1801-1809 Thomas Jefferson; 1809-1817 james madison; http://www.dcs.hull.ac.uk/public/genealogy/presidents/presidents.html
Extractions: This database is a web browsable version of the published Gedcom of the genealogy of the US Presidents. I am, therefore, unable to vouch for the accuracy of the data, or make changes or corrections. This database contains, in addition to data from the published Gedcoms, links to other genealogical databases and sites with information on the same people. The data can be accessed in several ways. You can use the index which has been organised in surname order, an index of Presidents, or various search functions. The search functions frequently do not achieve the desired result due to the loading the put on my machine and the large number of users. This database is part of a larger set of genealogical databases held at the University of Hull. The particular focus is on Royal and Noble genealogy You may also be interested in the Presidents Libraries which is part of the Leadership Information Archives The Whitehouse also supplies US Government Information about the Presidents George Washington John Adams Thomas Jefferson James Madison ... James Earl Carter Jr.
Freedom: A History Of US. Webisode 2: Revolution. Segment 4 | PBS james madison wrote, Hear It Now james madison Each of the Majority Should AlwaysPrevail Jefferson to madison volume book series, A History of us by Joy http://www.pbs.org/wnet/historyofus/web02/segment4.html
Extractions: Revolutions are difficult, but building a strong nation is even harder. In 1781 we faced one of the toughest problems there can be in designing a government . How do you provide freedom for each person and still have a government powerful enough to accomplish things? At first, the government was just too weak. In 1783, the Congress got chased out of Philadelphia by its own army because it hadn't paid their salaries . It had no money and no power to collect taxes After their bad experience with kings and Parliament, Americans were afraid of a strong congress and a strong president. So they had gone to the other extreme. The Articles of Confederation , the country's first constitution, didn't give Congress the power to do much of anything. There was no president except the president of the Congress. And he couldn't do much either. James Madison , among others, was worried. He wrote, "If some very strong props are not applied, the present system will tumble to the ground." So a new constitutional convention was called. When General Washington rode into the country's largest city, Philadelphia
Presidents Of The United States Includes information about us presidents, including biographies, campaign histories, trivia, genealogy, Category Society History North America United States presidents Measures, Resources about the four us presidents who were assassinated Abraham Lincoln,james Garfield, William and death of each president including date http://www.presidentsusa.net/
Extractions: For a list of all the US Presidents and links to a specific President click here. Academic Study Centers Centers devoted to research and study of the Presidency as an institution, the policies of past and future administrations, and analysis of issues faced by US Presidents. Assassinations, Attempts, and Security Measures Resources about the four US Presidents who were assassinated: Abraham Lincoln, James Garfield, William McKinley, and John F. Kennedy in addition to information about the attempted assassinations of: Andrew Jackson, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry S Truman, Gerald Ford, and Ronald Reagan. Also, information about White House security and the Secret Service. Biographies Biographies from the official White House web site, online encyclopedias, other web sites about the American Presidents, as well as complete books you can read online. Birth and Death Information Information about the birth and death of each President including date and location as well as information on how to visit the birthplace and gravesite.
American Writers: Jefferson & Madison state (18019) under Thomas Jefferson, he helped develop us foreign policy Electedpresident in 1808, he was occupied by the trade and Works by james madison. http://www.americanwriters.org/writers/jefferson_madison.asp
Extractions: Select a writer William Bradford Benjamin Franklin Thomas Paine Thomas Jefferson James Madison James Fenimore Cooper Sojourner Truth Ralph Waldo Emerson Henry David Thoreau Elizabeth Cady Stanton Nathaniel Hawthorne Frederick Douglass Harriet Beecher Stowe Mary Chesnut Abraham Lincoln Mark Twain Willa Cather Black Elk Booker T. Washington W.E.B Du Bois Henry Adams Edith Wharton Upton Sinclair Theodore Roosevelt Theodore Dreiser Will Rogers Langston Hughes Zora Neale Hurston H.L. Mencken F. Scott Fitzgerald Ernest Hemingway John Steinbeck William Faulkner Ayn Rand Ernie Pyle Whittaker Chambers Walter Lippmann Jack Kerouac James Baldwin Betty Friedan Russell Kirk William F. Buckley David Halberstam Neil Sheehan Select a work Mayflower Compact Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin Common Sense Declaration of Independence U.S. Constitution Journals of the Expedition Last of the Mohicans Narrative of Sojourner Truth Nature Walden Declaration of Sentiments The Scarlet Letter Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass Uncle Tom's Cabin A Diary from Dixie Gettysburg Address The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn O Pioneers!
Extractions: Search Site Map Contact Us Suggestions ... CULER Board of Trustees The Board of Trustees is a core support group for the Center. It is composed of representatives from the professional community, including the public, private, corporate and non-profit sectors. Representation on the Board is sought from the array of functional areas related to real estate and urban development such as brokerage, property management, consulting, development, appraisal, investment, asset management, law, mortgage banking, lending, corporate real estate, institutional investment, syndication, planning, regulation, and design. Board trustees are drawn from among the senior leadership of the real estate industry both regionally and nationally. The Board of Trustees pledges to support the Center's activities financially through an initial contribution and subsequent annual contributions. The Board of Trustees advises the Center on its agenda, through representation on and involvement in the Research, Membership and Education Committees. Current Members Tamara Adler
PharmaCongress: Home DC Uwe E. Reinhardt, Ph.D. james madison Professor of of Privacy Officers Washington,DC james Sheehan, Esq Assistant us Attorney Chief, Civil Division Eastern http://www.pharmacongress.com/
Extractions: Church Fundraising Ideas Center Return Home Fundraising Ideas Free Fundraising Information 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
James Madison - History Celebrities This article sponsored by Your Ad Could Be Here! Contact us. james madison. 4thPresident. Term March 4, 1809 to March 4, 1817. Democratic-Republican Party. http://www.aboutfamouspeople.com/article1096.html
Extractions: This article sponsored by: Your Ad Could Be Here! Contact Us JAMES MADISON 4th President Term- March 4, 1809 to March 4, 1817 Democratic-Republican Party Birth: Port Conway, Virginia, March 16, 1751 Ancestry: English Marriage: "Harewood" Jefferson County, Virginia, September 15, 1794 to Dorothea (Dolly) Payne Todd who was born in Guilford County, North Carolina, May 20, 1768. Dolly died in Washington D.C., July 12, 1849, and is buried at "Montpelier", Virginia. Children: None Home: "Montpelier", Virginia. Education: Received early education at Donald Robertson's school in Virginia and from private tutors; Awarded B.A. from the College of New Jersey (Princeton 1771); one year postgraduate study at Princeton. Religion: Episcopalian Occupation before Presidency: Member of Orange County Committee of Safety; Delegate to the Virginia Convention; Member of Virginia Legislature; Member of Virginia Executive Council; Delegate to Continental Congress; Delegate to Annapolis Convention; Delegate to Constitutional Convention; Member of the Virginia Ratification Convention; U.S. Congressman; Secretary of State. Age at Inauguration: 57 First Administration: Vice-President: George Clinton of New York, Inauguration March 4, 1809, House of Representatives, Washington D.C.
Biographies Of The U.S. Presidents Jackson. John Quincy Adams, james Monroe, james madison. Thomas Jefferson,John Adams, George Washington. Top of section The us Presidents, http://www.factmonster.com/ipka/A0855114.html
Eva Gremmert's Genealogy Site John Adams, 2nd president 1797 1801 Thomas Jefferson, 3rd president 1801 - 1809james madison, 4th president 1809 - 1817 james Monroe, 5th president 1817 http://users.legacyfamilytree.com/uspresidents/
James Madison And James Monroe Features information on America's fourth and fifth presidents with an emphasis on their similarities and differences in politics and childhood. http://www.jmu.edu/madison/madisonmonroe.htm
Extractions: Fredericksburg, Virginia A revision of remarks originally presented at the annual meeting of The James Madison Museum, Orange, Virginia, September 25, 1991. The author acknowledges sources passim in Harry Ammon, James Monroe: The Quest for National Identity (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1990). A few years ago two popular singers who had discovered that their work was very sympathetic, each to the other, made a recording that they called "Twin Sons of Different Mothers." That is a phrase which could also be applied to James Madison and James Monroe and indeed increased to triplets, to include Thomas Jefferson. These men shared so much and from each came one of the three great documents of the formation of our country in the world, the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the Monroe Doctrine. Madison and Monroe were both born in the Northern Neck (as was Washington, and ancestors of many others, including Jefferson), and both spent their mature years on piedmont Virginia farms they loved, in Albemarle and Orange and Loudoun counties. Their lives were tightly interwoven, like brothers including healthy rivalries, as when Monroe twice ran against Madison, and one major period of strain, when for two years they did not speak to or see each other. And they began and ended their careers as colleagues and personal friends.
From Revolution To Reconstruction: Presidents Index contains biographies, sketches, writings, and speeches.Category Society History North America United States Presidents Thomas Jefferson 18011809; james madison 1809-1817; james Monroe 1817-1825; John Quincy Adams 1825-1829; Andrew Jackson 1829 http://odur.let.rug.nl/~usa/P/
Extractions: FRtR Presidents This area is an index on the presidents of the United States and contains information and documents of their speeches, writings, biographies and anything else related to their person or the office they are holding. George Washington John Adams Thomas Jefferson James Madison ... George W. Bush Websites dedicated to the American Presidents Biographies of all presidents by Clinton Presidential Materials: The Whitehouse website Biographies of all presidents and first ladies by Grolier online POTUS-Presidents of the United States by The Internet Public Library Presidents by Leadership Information Archives (Ibiblio) US Election results since 1789 Trivia about all presidents by Fujisan American Presidents: Life Portraits by C-SPAN Portraits of the Presidents and First Ladies by Library of Congress The National Portrait Gallery: Hall of Presidents by the Smithsonian Institution The American Presidency (including additional information on US politics in general) by Grolier online
Dolley Payne (Todd) Madison She died in Washington on July 12, 1849. Dolley Payne madison was the wife of PresidentJames madison and one of the most famous First Ladies in us History. http://www.virtualology.com/DOLLEYPAYNEMADISON.COM/
Extractions: You are in: Museum of History Hall of USA US First Ladies Dolley Payne (Todd) Madison First Lady from March 4, 1801 to March 4, 1817 Click here to read Dolley Madison's letter concerning the burning of Washington DC By Sherri W. Gotha Middle School Windermere, Florida. In 1814 the British invaded Washington D.C. They burned the White House. But as it was going up in flames she managed to save some important papers and a portrait of George Washington. Dolley Madison is one of the most famous first ladies in American history. Funny what you can find on president's wives, if you just look. Dolley Madison was born Dolley Payne in Guilford County, N. C., on May 20, 1768. Her family moved to Virginia when she was an infant, and she spent the first 15 years of her life there. In 1783 her Quaker parents moved to Philadelphia, where, in 1790, she married Quaker lawyer John Todd, Jr. They had two children: one died in 1793 during the same yellow-fever epidemic that took her husband's life; the other was John Payne Todd.
American Presidents: Life Portraits Site complements CSPAN television series of the same name. Includes brief facts about each president, Category Society History North America United States presidents Pick a president. http://www.americanpresidents.org/
Extractions: Pick a President George Washington John Adams Thomas Jefferson James Madison James Monroe John Quincy Adams Andrew Jackson Martin Van Buren William Henry Harrison John Tyler James K. Polk Zachary Taylor Millard Fillmore Franklin Pierce James Buchanan Abraham Lincoln Andrew Johnson Ulysses S. Grant Rutherford B. Hayes James A. Garfield Chester A. Arthur Grover Cleveland Benjamin Harrison William McKinley Theodore Roosevelt William Howard Taft Woodrow Wilson Warren G. Harding Calvin Coolidge Herbert Hoover Franklin D. Roosevelt Harry S Truman Dwight D. Eisenhower John F. Kennedy Lyndon B. Johnson Richard M. Nixon Gerald R. Ford Jimmy Carter Ronald Reagan George Bush Bill Clinton George W. Bush