He was President 1825 - 1829
John Adams's rivalry against Thomas Jefferson was what led him to run for president
one 4-year term
John Adams's rivalry against Thomas Jefferson was what led him to run for president
John Quincy Adams NEVER ran to president in the sense this question is presented. JQA believed the office should seek the man; the man would demonstrate his unworthiness by "running" for office.
He could run, yes. He's no longer eligible to run for president, as he's served two full terms, but he's still eligible for other offices. John Quincy Adams was a congressman AFTER he was president.
John C. Calhoun from SC served as vice president while Adams was president. Calhoun remained the Vice-President of the United States for three years under the next president Andrew Jackson . Calhoun became the first VP to resign from office, on December 28, 1832, when he decided to run for Senate.
he didnt run for president
John C. Calhoun was 7th Vice President of the United States and from South Carolina. Calhoun was Vice President to both John Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson. Calhoun tried to run for President but was unable to gain the nomination, losing to Polk.
Yes, if they can get elected. John Quincy Adams and Andrew Johnson actually did.
he can run for the house, but not the senate.
John C. Calhoun served as Vice President under both John Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson (first term). Calhoun was from South Carolina and was the 7th US Vice President (1825-1832). He resigned while serving under Jackson in order to run for the Senate in 1832, and so was the first Vice President to resign his office.John C. Calhoun was the Vice President to both John Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson.Calhoun was the 7th Vice President of the United States from 1825 March 4 to 1832 December 28.
It was never a custom, but the first U.S. President to choose not to run for a second term, having promissed not to during his campaign, was James K. Polk. (John Tyler did not choose not to run for reelection; his party had kicked him out during the sixth month of his presidency, and no party would nominate him. John Adams, John Quincy Adams and Martin Van Buren ran for reelection but lost.)