no
James Monroe
James Monroe in the election of 1820
James Monroe, the fifth President of the United States, had three children: Eliza Monroe, James Monroe Jr., and Maria Hester Monroe. Eliza, born in 1786, married George Hay and had several children. James Monroe Jr. lived only a short time, dying in infancy, while Maria, born in 1799, married Samuel L. Gouverneur and also had children.
James Monroe's dad was (Colonel) Spence Monroe. He died when James Monroe was only 16 years old.
John Quincy Adams was the son of President John Adams, making him the only U.S. president to be the son of another president. William Henry Harrison, James Monroe, and Andrew Jackson did not have sons who became presidents.
The capital of Liberia, which is Monrovia was named for James Monroe.
Monrovia, the capital of LIberia, was named for James Monroe.
Although Monrovia, Liberia is the only foreign capital city named after a former US President (James Monroe) it is not the only non-US city named in honor of a past chief executive. Presidente Hayes, a department (equivalent to a county or province) in Paraguay and it's capital Villa Hayes are both named for former President Rutherford B. Hayes
No, he was not. The only president considered truly overweight was William Howard Taft, who weighed in at over 300 lbs.
JFK.
Yes, James Monroe did have a pet. However, he only had one and not several. He had a dog who was a spaniel.
James Monroe (the 6th US President) had been Secretary of State under the 5th President, James Madison, during the War of 1812. He was also Secretary of War for six months after the war's end before resuming the State position. Both of Madison's Vice Presidents, George Clinton and Elbridge Gerry, had died in office. In 1816, Monroe ran as a candidate for the Democratic-Republican party (known then as ''Republicans'') against a disorganized and factional Federalist party. Since the Federalists had opposed the War of 1812, they were generally unpopular. Monroe's only opponent was the little-known Rufus King of New York, who won only three states for a total of 34 electoral votes to Monroe's 183. In 1820, Monroe topped that by running absolutely unopposed, the only President to do so other than George Washington.