Andrew Jackson was the first president who had moved out of the state in which in was born by the time he was elected President. He was born in South (or maybe North) Carolina but made his adult time in Tennessee. The first six presidents resided their entire lives in one state.
Yes, if they moved up from vice-president to president with less than two years to go in the term. Otherwise, they can not be re-elected if they are elected president once.
38 of the 43 US Presidents were elected to the position; the other five (Tyler, Fillmore, A. Johnson, Arthur and Ford ) moved up to fill a vacancy after the president died or resigned and were never actuallly elected to be President. (Four others first took the office by moving up from vice-president, but were then elected to a term of their own.)
Um, yeah... when he was elected President, for example, he moved into the White House. (He had moved before that, as well.)
John Adams and his wife Abigail moved in first, in 1800.
John Tyler, Fillmore, Andrew Johnson, and Chester Arthur were vice-presidents who moved up to president when the president died. In those days, a vacant vice-presidency was not filled until the next presidential election, so these men had no vice-president and were not re-elected as president so they never had a vice-president. ( Theodore Roosevelt, Calvin Coolidge ,Harry Truman and Lyndon Johnson also moved up to president from vice-president and so lacked a vice-president for their first term,but all were elected to a second term and had a vice-president then. )Nowaday there is a process for getting a new vice-president if the President dies.
Mirabeau B. Lamar was the first vice-president elected by the people of Texas, Zavala de Lorenzo was chosen by the constitutional convention to serve as interim vice-president until elections could be held.
There was no vice-president after Arthur became president. Until 1967, a vacancy in the vice-presidential office was not filled until the next presidential election. Arthur was the elected vice-president but he moved up to President after Garfield was killed.trick question, he didn't have one!
John Tyler was the first person to move up to president after being elected only as vice-president. Gerald Ford was appointed ( not elected) vice-president and moved up to President - he was the only to do that without being elected to either office. Gerald Ford. He was vice president however he was appointed vice president and not elected vice president. He did become president because he was "next in line".
Yes. Grant moved into the white house when he was elected 18th president of the USA in 1869.
South Korean remained in a military dictatorship until 1989. With the first democratically elected president that year, the South's Koreans have moved steadily toward a true democracy.
Her husband, John Adams, was elected to be president (since he was vice president) after George Washington died in 1799. In 1800, he won the election and both Abigail and John Adams moved into the "President's House" (White House) in Washington D.C. , which was still unfortunately under construction.