yes. there are age restrictions and educational requirements as well as work history in politics but no requirement to have been in the armed forces even though a job of the president is to be the commander in chief of all armed forces. are age (35) and citizenship (native-born US Citizen)
powers powers and more powers we havent found out y yet though
Dwight Eisenhower was the president of the 50's. serving from 1953 though 1960.
He served in WWI In the 11th Bavarian regiment as a cadet. He was never in active service though.
He served in WWI In the 11th Bavarian regiment as a cadet. He was never in active service though.
All people are unhappy if they can not find a job. However a veteran who served their country and can not find a job, might feel as though they were a sucker for having served in the military while people who did not serve in the military can find work.
No - great man though he was, Lincoln never served in the military, and thusly was never eligible for a Purple Heart.
there are presidents that have served two and three terms. so, even though we've only had 44, we have had two and three inauration for the same president.
No president severed more than 2 terms. Franklin D. Roosevelt served more than 2 terms, though.
Andrew Jackson, James K. Polk, and Andrew Johnson, though none of them were actually born in Tennessee.
Jackson served 2 terms which is 8 years. He didn't want to have a longer term than the Presidents before him, so he didn't sign for another term even though he probably would have won.
43 men have served as president, though only 2 have had their sons serve as president. John Adams served as president from 1797 to 1801, followed some time after by his son John Quincy Adams who served from 1825 to 1829. Much later George H.W. Bush served as president from 1989 to 1993, then his son, George W. Bush served as president from 2001 to 2009.
The Reconstruction Act divided former Confederacy (not including Tennessee) into five military districts. President Andrew Johnson vetoed the act ,though, on march 2 1867.