"succeed" means to follow in this case - it is the opposite of precede.
One can say that Madison succeeded Jefferson as president which means that Madison was the next president after Jefferson.
Thomas Jefferson was succeeded by James Madison who served from 1809 to 1817.
Thomas Jefferson was the 3rd President of the US, serving from March 4, 1801 to March 4, 1809. He was succeeded by James Madison.
William Jefferson Clinton was succeeded by George Walker Bush who became the 43rd President of the United States.
Thomas Jefferson was inaugurated on March 4, 1801. He succeeded John Adams.
Thomas Jefferson
If you mean who WAS the President of the Confederate States of America, that was Jefferson Davis. The Vice President was Alexander Stephens.
Thomas Jefferson was elected in 1800 and took office on March 4, 1881. He remained President until March 4, 1809. He succeeded John Adams.
Yes...... Thomas Jefferson was successful because if he wasn't he would not have been elected as the vice president or be the 3 president of the United States of America at all. He's also successful because he made good choices for the U.S.A and had succeeded a lot once he was a kid................................... R.I.P Thomas Jefferson
This has happened to more than one man, in fact several men have been elected to both offices:John Adams (1st Vice President, 2nd President)Thomas Jefferson (2nd Vice President, 3nd President)Martin Van Buren (8th Vice President, 8th President)Theodore Roosevelt (25th Vice President, 26th President) *succeeded McKinleyCalvin Coolidge (29th Vice President, 30th President) *succeeded HardingHarry Truman (34th Vice President, 33rd President) * succeeded FDRRichard Nixon (36th Vice President, 37th President)Lyndon B. Johnson (2nd Vice President, 3nd President) *succeeded KennedyGeorge H.W. Bush (43rd Vice President, 41st President)There is not "only one". George Bush (the first one), Richard Nixon, Lyndon Johnson, Harry Truman, Calvin Coolidge, Theodore Roosevelt, Martin Van Buren, Thomas Jefferson, and John Adams were all elected as both President and Vice President. (Though in the case of Jefferson and Adams, under the Constitutionally-prescribed rules for choosing Presidents and Vice Presidents at that time, they were "elected" Vice President only because they came in second in the Electoral College vote for President - Adams second to Washington, twice, and Jefferson second to Adams - before succeeding in a subsequent election. This is not so much "being elected Vice President" as it is "losing the election for President."Perhaps you meant to ask who was the only President who was NOT elected as either President or Vice President. That would be Gerald Ford, appointed as Nixon's Vice President in 1973, and succeeded to the Presidency in 1974.
Thomas Jefferson
Thomas Jefferson was the president during Thomas Jefferson's second term as president.
Jefferson Davis was the President of the Confederacy