Presidents
1. George Washington 2. John Adams 3. Thomas Jefferson
4. James Madison 5. James Monroe 6. John Quincy Adams
7. Andrew Jackson 8. Martin Van Buren 9. William Henry
10. John Tyler 11. James Knox Polk 12. Zachary Taylor
13. Millard Fillmore 14. Franklin Pierce 15. James Buchanan
16. Abraham Lincoln 17. Andrew Johnson 18. Ulysses S. Grant
19. Rutherford B. Hayes 20. James Garfield 21. Chester Arthur
22. Grover Cleveland 23. Benjamin Harrison 24. Grover Cleveland
25. William McKinley 26. Theodore Roosevelt 27. William Howard Taft
28. Woodrow Wilson 29. Warren Harding 30. Calvin Coolidge
31. Herbert Hoover 32. Franklin D. Roosevelt 33. Harry S Truman
34. Dwight D. Eisenhower 35. John F. Kennedy 36. Lyndon Johnson
37. Richard Nixon 38. Gerald Ford 39. James Carter
40. Ronald Reagan 41. George H. W. Bush 42. William J. Clinton
Since George Washington's election in 1789, 43 men have served as President of the United States. They have led in times of peace and war, hardship and plenty, and served in tenures as short as one month and as long as 12 years. Learn more about America's Presidents.
President Directory:
The Federal Convention convened in the State House (Independence Hall) in Philadelphia on May 14, 1787, to revise the Articles of Confederation. Because the delegations from only two states were at first present, the members adjourned from day to day until a quorum of seven states was obtained on May 25. Through discussion and debate it became clear by mid-June that, rather than amend the existing Articles, the Convention would draft an entirely new frame of government.
All through the summer, in closed sessions, the delegates debated, and redrafted the articles of the new Constitution. Among the chief points at issue were how much power to allow the central government, how many representatives in Congress to allow each state, and how these representatives should be elected--directly by the people or by the state legislators. The work of many minds, the Constitution stands as a model of cooperative statesmanship and the art of compromise.
Presidents Of The United States Of America



