A Presidential triva question

Calvin Coolidge

Good trivia, Little Nemo!

James Monroe

Silent Cal was born on the 4th of July, but didn’t die on it, too.

Depending on who you ask, Jackson was born in either North Carolina or South Carolina. (SC has the official claim.)

Johnson was born in North Carolina.

Both states on the outermost edge of the U.S. Hmmmm. Maybe I was right too, after all!

If not directly after the end of their vice-presidential terms, I’m going to go with Bush Senior and Nixon. If directly, I’m going to have to disagree with Elendil’s Heir and say that Johnson counts instead of Nixon, not going as far back as Van Buren. (And wouldn’t Teddy Roosevelt count, since he was elected in his own right after McKinley was assassinated?)

Bush I and Van Buren were the last two sitting VPs to be elected POTUS.

Thats what I meant…sorry fer not being clear.

  1. What president was a King?

  2. What president’s last surviving child died over 100 years after that president’s term ended?

  3. Only one president has a major political subdivision (the equivalent of a state/province/department) *and *a city named after him in a country outside the US. Who?

  4. Another president just has a city named for him in a country outside the US. Who?

  1. What president was a King?

Err. Leslie Lynch King, Jr., aka Gerald Ford?

  1. Another president just has a city named for him in a country outside the US. Who?Monrovia, Liberia was named after James Monroe.

Great – but those were the easy ones. :slight_smile:

Was it Cleveland? I think he married late in his life.

i thought so to, but his last son died 98 years later by my count.

One of John Tyler’s children made it to the 1940s, but I forget if that child reached that benchmark

Correct. She died 102 years after her father left office; he was 70 when she was born.

One more to go.

I’m guessing Washington. I know he’s got a lot of admirers in Latin America.

Rutherford Birchard Hayes had a department named after him in Paraguay. Also, Theodore Roosevelt had a river named after him in Brazil if I’m remembering right.

Hayes also has a city named for him: Villa Hayes in the Presidente Hayes department. See the map – Presidente Hayes is the pinkish area in the center, and Villa Hayes is at the southeastern coner of the department (and is its capital).

Hayes – who has no honor approaching this in the US – had been asked to arbritrate in the War of the Triple Alliance. It was fought over the Chaco region, claimed by both Bolivia and Paraguay (though God knows why). If you see a map of Paraguay, the country looks like a peanut, and the upper “lobe” of the peanut is the Chaco – everything west of the Rio Paraguay. Hayes found in Paraguay’s favor, doubling the size of the country, and, in honor, the new area was name for him, and the city renamed.

AFAIK, Hayes never visited the district and city that bore his name.

What’s the most common first name among U.S. Presidents? No Googling! You must think up the answer!