There's only one day that saw the birth of more than one vice president, but it was a triple: Abraham Lincoln's first vice president, Hannibal Hamlin; Calvin Coolidge's vice president, Charles G. Dawes; and John Kennedy's vice president, Lyndon Baines Johnson (later president himself) were all born on August 27. Hamlin was born in 1809, Dawes in 1865, and Johnson in 1908. Unlike the presidents, only one other pair of vice presidents comes close: Adlai E. Stevenson (vice president from 1893 to 1897) was born on October 23, 1835, and James S. Sherman (1909-13) was born on October 24, 1855.
Check out the Wikipedia page List of Vice Presidents of the United States by Age for verification.
Washington (2/22) and Lincoln (2/12) are the celebrated President with birthdays in February. Washington's birthday is the federal government's longstanding holiday, but after they decided to move it each year so that it always falls on Monday, people began calling it President's day and it became rather a double celebration for Washington and Lincoln.
I am not sure what you mean, but in 1752 Britain and British Colonies in America switched to the modern Gregorian calendar from the Julian and the "old style Julian" dates are 11 days different for dates before 1752. Washington was born on February 11, 1732 by the calendar they used then and that is the date that Washington always celebrated as his birthday, but that is February 22, in the new calendar. John Adams, Thomas Jefferson and James Madison all had two birthdays for the same reason. Jefferson's tombstone gives his old style date of birthday.
The 11th president James K. Polk and the 23rd president Warren G. Harding were both born on November 2nd. obviously different years.
Three U. S. Vice Presidents, Hannibal Hamlin, Charles Dawes and Lyndon Johnson, were born on the 27th of August.
The probability, over presidents of all organisations, through all of time, is 1.
During Thomas Jefferson's first term, the Vice President was Aaron Burr. Jefferson's second term as President was George Clinton's first term as Vice President (Clinton was one of the two U.S. Vice Presidents who served under two Presidents).
The reason that there have been four more U. S. Vice Presidents than there have been U. S. Presidents is due to the eleven Presidents who did not have just one Vice President. Four Presidents, Tyler, Fillmore, A. Johnson and Arthur, had no Vice President (a 4-VP shortage). Six Presidents, Madison, Lincoln, Grant, Cleveland, McKinley and Nixon, each had two Vice Presidents (a 6-VP surplus). One President, Franklin Roosevelt, had three Vice Presidents (a 2-VP surplus). Six extra plus two extra minus four short equals four extra.
There have been two men who served as vice president under two different presidents, George Clinton and John Calhoun.
The two Presidents of the past 50 years who had been both Vice President and President when they lost a Presidential election were Gerald Ford and George H. W. Bush.
because there is a president and a vice president thats why he said we have two presidents
To date, two U. S. Vice Presidents have been born in Pennsylvania, George Dallas and Joe Biden.
North Carolina has not been the home state of any U. S. Vice Presidents to date, but two Vice Presidents were born there:William R. King (1853)Andrew Johnson (1865)
James Madison lost both of his vice-presidents to death. They were George Clinton and Elbridge Gerry.
hannibale harmlin,andrew johnson
Two vice presidents from Minnesota are Hubert H. Humphrey, who served as vice president under President Lyndon B. Johnson from 1965 to 1969, and Walter Mondale, who served as vice president under President Jimmy Carter from 1977 to 1981.