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Inaugural Trivia Firsts and facts about presidential inaugurations

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NOTABLE INAUGURAL EVENTS

Ø George Washington's was the shortest inaugural address at 135 words. (1793)

Ø Thomas Jefferson was the only president to walk to and from his inaugural. He was also the first to be inaugurated at the Capitol. (1801)

Ø The first inaugural ball was held for James Madison. (1809)

Ø John Quincy Adams was the first president sworn in wearing long trousers. (1825)

Ø Franklin Pierce was the first president to affirm rather than swear the oath of office (1853). Herbert Hoover followed suit in 1929.

Ø William H. Harrison's was the longest inaugural address at 8,445 words. (1841)

Ø The first inauguration to be photographed was James Buchanan's. (1857)

Ø Abraham Lincoln was the first to include African-Americans in his parade. (1865)

Ø James Garfield's mother was the first to attend her son's inauguration. (1881)

Ø William McKinley's inauguration was the first ceremony to be recorded by a motion picture camera. (1897)

Ø William Taft's wife was the first one to accompany her husband in the procession from the Capitol to the White House. (1909)

Ø Women were included for the first time in Woodrow Wilson's second inaugural parade. (1917)

Ø Warren G. Harding was the first president to ride to and from his inaugural in an automobile. (1921)

Ø Calvin Coolidge's oath was administered by Chief Justice (and ex-president) William Taft. It was also the first inaugural address broadcast on the radio. (1925)

Ø Harry Truman's was the first to be televised. (1949)

Ø John Kennedy's inauguration had Robert Frost as the first poet to participate in the official ceremony. (1961) The only other President to feature poets was Bill Clinton. Maya Angelou read at his 1993 inaugural, and Miller Williams read at his second, in 1997. (1961)

Ø Lyndon Johnson was the first (and so far) only president to be sworn in by a woman, U.S. District Judge Sarah T. Hughes. (1963)

Ø Jimmy Carter's inaugural parade featured solar heat for the reviewing stand and handicap-accessible viewing. (1977)

Ø Ronald Reagan's second inaugural had to compete with Super Bowl Sunday. (1985)

Ø The first ceremony broadcast on the Internet was Bill Clinton's second inauguration. (1997)

 

PLACE

All but six presidents took the presidential oath in Washington, D.C.The exceptions were:

· George Washington—1789, New York City; 1793, Philadelphia

· John Adams—1797, Philadelphia

· Chester Alan Arthur—1881, New York City

· Theodore Roosevelt—1901, Buffalo

· Calvin Coolidge—1923, Plymouth, Vt.

· Lyndon Baines Johnson—1963, Dallas

When Washington and Adams were sworn in, the U.S. capital had not yet been transferred from Philadelphia to Washington, D.C. (the latter became the seat of government beginning Dec. 1, 1800). Arthur, T. Roosevelt, Coolidge, and L. B. Johnson had all been vice-presidents who assumed the presidency upon the deaths of their predecessors, and none was in Washington, D.C., when the oath of office was administered.

 

TIME

Except for Washington's first inaugural, when he was sworn in on April 30, 1789, all presidents until 1937 were inaugurated in March in an effort to avoid bad weather. The 20th Amendment to the Constitution (passed in 1933) changed the inaugural date to January 20. Franklin Delano Roosevelt's Second Inauguration was the first to have been held on that date.


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Читайте в этой же книге: President of the United States | Life after the Presidency | United States Electoral College | Cabinet-level administration offices | Growth of the office | Succession and the 25th Amendment | Proportional vote | Political probabilities | Transition events | Inaugural traditions |
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