President for a Day... A True Story...

5fish

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Here is our story for a President for a Day...


On a statue in Plattsburg, Missouri, an inscription reads, "David Rice Atchison, 1807-1886, President of the U.S. [for] one day." The day of President Atchison's presumed presidency occurred on March 4, 1849.

A proslavery Democrat, David Atchison served in the U.S. Senate from 1843 to 1855.
His colleagues elected him president pro tempore on 13 occasions. In those days, the vice president regularly attended Senate sessions. Consequently, the Senate chose a president pro tempore to serve only during brief vice presidential absences.

Until the 1930s, presidential and congressional terms began at noon on March 4. In 1849 that date fell on a Sunday, causing President Zachary Taylor to delay his inauguration until the next day. For some, this raised the question of who was president from noon of March 4 to noon of March 5. Of course, we now know that Taylor automatically became president on the fourth and could have begun to execute the duties of his office after taking the oath privately, a day before the public inauguration.

In 1849 the Senate president pro tempore immediately followed the vice president in line of presidential succession. That era's ever-present threat of sudden death made it essential to keep an unbroken order of succession. To ensure that there was a president pro tempore in office during adjournment periods, the vice president customarily left the Senate Chamber in an annual session's final days so that the Senate could elect this constitutional officer. Accordingly, the Senate duly elected Atchison on March 2, 1849. His supporters, to the present day, claim that the expiration of the outgoing president's and vice president's terms at noon on March 4 left Atchison with clear title to the job.

Unfortunately for Atchison's shaky claim, his Senate term also expired at noon on March 4, thereby denying him the chance to become president
. When the Senate of the new Congress convened the following day to allow new senators and the vice president to take the oath of office, with no president pro tempore, the secretary of the Senate called members to order.

No one planning to attend Taylor's March 5 inauguration seemed to have realized that there had been a "President Atchison" in charge. Nonetheless, for the rest of his life, Atchison enjoyed polishing this story, describing his "presidency" as "the honestest administration this country ever had."
 

5fish

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Here is a story about poetry and our presidents...


We’ve taken a look at American presidents throughout history and compiled a list of 12 commanders-in-chief and their favorite poets. Given the makeup of U.S. presidents thus far, the heavily male lineup doesn’t shock. Neither does the fact that presidents tend to be intimidated by poets (or secretly want to be poets) or that poets can be petty enough to make snide remarks about a president’s housekeeping. But we’re still holding out for a surprise: perhaps if the Republican candidate prevails, he’ll reveal his love for the Belle of Amherst or another poet from the state he used to govern.
 

5fish

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@diane .... A VP that was half Native American... @rittmeister , @jgoodguy , @Wehrkraftzersetzer


This black-and-white photographic portrait is of Vice President Charles Curtis. Curtis served President Herbert Hoover as the 31st Vice President of the United States from 1929-1933. Born in Kansas to a white father and Native American mother, and raised by his maternal grandparents, Curtis was the first person of Native American descent as well as the first person of color to serve as vice president.
 

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Here is more on the White House and Native Americans...

 

rittmeister

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@diane .... A VP that was half Native American... @rittmeister , @jgoodguy , @Wehrkraftzersetzer


This black-and-white photographic portrait is of Vice President Charles Curtis. Curtis served President Herbert Hoover as the 31st Vice President of the United States from 1929-1933. Born in Kansas to a white father and Native American mother, and raised by his maternal grandparents, Curtis was the first person of Native American descent as well as the first person of color to serve as vice president.
how about the north american confederacy?

8Sequoyah Guess1840–1842 (64–66 A.L.)Fourth president to die in office, was killed in battle by a Mexican sniper. First Native American president.
9Osceola1842–1848 (66–72 A.L.)Second Native American president.
 

diane

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@diane .... A VP that was half Native American... @rittmeister , @jgoodguy , @Wehrkraftzersetzer


This black-and-white photographic portrait is of Vice President Charles Curtis. Curtis served President Herbert Hoover as the 31st Vice President of the United States from 1929-1933. Born in Kansas to a white father and Native American mother, and raised by his maternal grandparents, Curtis was the first person of Native American descent as well as the first person of color to serve as vice president.
I've thought of him a few times! During that time, and some time before it, many Natives in the West were thinking about assimilation the way the so-called civilized tribes had done it. That resulted in being one thing outside the house and another thing inside it! But it often worked for simple survival.
 

rittmeister

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Here is our story for a President for a Day...


On a statue in Plattsburg, Missouri, an inscription reads, "David Rice Atchison, 1807-1886, President of the U.S. [for] one day." The day of President Atchison's presumed presidency occurred on March 4, 1849.

A proslavery Democrat, David Atchison served in the U.S. Senate from 1843 to 1855.
His colleagues elected him president pro tempore on 13 occasions. In those days, the vice president regularly attended Senate sessions. Consequently, the Senate chose a president pro tempore to serve only during brief vice presidential absences.

Until the 1930s, presidential and congressional terms began at noon on March 4. In 1849 that date fell on a Sunday, causing President Zachary Taylor to delay his inauguration until the next day. For some, this raised the question of who was president from noon of March 4 to noon of March 5. Of course, we now know that Taylor automatically became president on the fourth and could have begun to execute the duties of his office after taking the oath privately, a day before the public inauguration.

In 1849 the Senate president pro tempore immediately followed the vice president in line of presidential succession. That era's ever-present threat of sudden death made it essential to keep an unbroken order of succession. To ensure that there was a president pro tempore in office during adjournment periods, the vice president customarily left the Senate Chamber in an annual session's final days so that the Senate could elect this constitutional officer. Accordingly, the Senate duly elected Atchison on March 2, 1849. His supporters, to the present day, claim that the expiration of the outgoing president's and vice president's terms at noon on March 4 left Atchison with clear title to the job.

Unfortunately for Atchison's shaky claim, his Senate term also expired at noon on March 4, thereby denying him the chance to become president
. When the Senate of the new Congress convened the following day to allow new senators and the vice president to take the oath of office, with no president pro tempore, the secretary of the Senate called members to order.

No one planning to attend Taylor's March 5 inauguration seemed to have realized that there had been a "President Atchison" in charge. Nonetheless, for the rest of his life, Atchison enjoyed polishing this story, describing his "presidency" as "the honestest administration this country ever had."
nice
 

diane

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He may have been...



This is the interesting story of assimilation and why a lot of Indians agreed with it, or at least in part with it. The Shasta people were just fine until about 1850, when gold was discovered under their lodges. Within 20 years 98% of the tribe had been killed or removed to Siletz, Grand Ronde or some other agency. Imagine the scale of that destruction in your family! Everyone gone but you and a cousin or two. The last place the tribe holed up was Bogus Tom's place near the Modoc country - and it was bad news. Tom decided the only way for the remnant of his people to survive and remain on at least some of their land was to marry into ranching and mining families, marry white men. We have photos of Tom dressed like a Shasta chief and looking pretty rough - photos a few years later he's wearing slacks and a tie, hair cut and he's looking like any other rancher in those parts. BUT...he did not forget who he was, nor did his people. It's like my dad said when the government was talking about closing the reservations - no! That's all we've got!
 

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She may not be president yet but she could be governor... of Minnesota ... The link works... @diane


Peggy Flanagan (Ojibwe: Gizhiiwewidamookwe;[a][1] born September 22, 1979) is an American politician, community organizer, and Native American activist serving as the 50th lieutenant governor of Minnesota since 2019. A member of the Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL), Flanagan served in the Minnesota House of Representatives from 2015 to 2019.


In 2016, she became the second Native American woman to address a Democratic National Convention. Two years later, she was elected Minnesota’s lieutenant governor, making her the country’s highest-ranking American Indian elected state official.
 

rittmeister

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She may not be president yet but she could be governor... of Minnesota ... The link works... @diane


Peggy Flanagan (Ojibwe: Gizhiiwewidamookwe;[a][1] born September 22, 1979) is an American politician, community organizer, and Native American activist serving as the 50th lieutenant governor of Minnesota since 2019. A member of the Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL), Flanagan served in the Minnesota House of Representatives from 2015 to 2019.


In 2016, she became the second Native American woman to address a Democratic National Convention. Two years later, she was elected Minnesota’s lieutenant governor, making her the country’s highest-ranking American Indian elected state official.
she will
 
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