John Quincy Adams and George W Bush
Gerald Ford
There are only two such combinations and they are Adams ( John and John Quincy) and Bush (George Herbert Walker and George Walker).There was a grandfather- grandson combination of Harrison ( William Henry and Benjamin)
John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Martin Van Buren, Richard Nixon and George H. W. Bush were all vice-presidents who were elected President after their vp terms ended.
Well, I suppose we all know that George W. Bush followed in George H. W. Bush, his father's footsteps to become president. John Adams and John Quincy Adams, the 2nd and 6th presidents. Theodore Roosevelt and Franklin Roosevelt, the 26th and 32nd presidents. I also know that William Harrison and his grandson Benjamin Harrison were the 9th and 23rd presidents of the USA.
establishing a cabinet picking a vice president setting an example for presidents to follow
John Adam, Thomas Jefferson, Millard Fillmore, Andrew Johnson, Chester Arthur, Theodore Roosevelt, Calvin Coolidge, Harry S. Truman, Lyndon B. Johnson, Gerald Ford, and George Bush were all Vice Presidents who went on to become the US President.
Yes- They were Theodore Roosevelt, Coolidge, Truman. Lyndon Johnson and Ford. In addition, former vice-presidents Nixon and George H. W. Bush ran for president and were elected,
There have been two US Presidents who were the sons of men who had been Presidents themselves:John Quincy Adams, the sixth president, was the son of John Adams, the second President.George Walker Bush, the 43rd president, was the son of George Herbert Walker Bush, the 41st president (and vice-president to Ronald Reagan, the 40th president).
Geroge H. W. Bush and George W. Bush are only the second father-son presidents.
John Adams Thomas Jefferson Martin Van Buren John Tyler Millard Fillmore Andrew Johnson Chester Alan Arthur Theodore Roosevelt Calvin Coolidge Harry S Truman Lyndon Johnson Richard Nixon Gerald Ford George Herbert Walker Bush there are 14
George Washington did not live there because it had not yet been built. The White House did not become the seat of the US government until 1800.