Of those four, Nixon was president first.
Ronald Wilson ReaganGerald Rudolph Ford Jr.James Earl "Jimmy" Carter Jr.Richard Milhous Nixon
No. In 1976, the Republican party convention was split between Gerald Ford and Ronald Reagan. Since he was the incumbent President (having followed Nixon), Ford won the nomination, but just barely. Ford lost the election to Jimmy Carter. In 1980, Reagan defeated Carter in a landslide vote.
none of them . . . Ronald Reagan nominated the first female US Supreme Court Justice, Sandra Day O'Connor, in 1981.
The last seven Presidents to serve out their terms or otherwise leave office were Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, James Earl Carter Jr. (Jimmy Carter), Ronald Reagan, George Herbert Walker Bush, William Jefferson Clinton (Bill Clinton), and George Walker Bush. The current President is Barack Obama, so if he is included in the count then Nixon would not be in the last seven.
There were two events that 5 US presidents attended at the same time. The first one is the opening of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library on November 4, 1991. This was also the first time in history that there were 5 presidents together at an event. The presidents were: Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan, and the senior Bush. The second time was at the funeral of Richard Nixon on April 27, 1994. The presidents there were: Ford, Carter, Reagan, the senior Bush, and Clinton.
First inauguration of Ronald Reagan was created in 1981.
Ronald Reagan was an "R" president. Richard Nixon and Rutherford Hayes had R first names.
Ronald Reagan was 69 at his first Inauguration
Nancy Reagan
First inauguration of Ronald Reagan happened on 1981-01-20.
When Walter Mondale ran for Vice President in 1976 and 1980, he was Jimmy Carter's running mate. When he ran for President in 1984, his running mate was Geraldine Ferraro (that was the first of two times to date that a woman was one of the major party Vice Presidential candidates).
Twice. The first time in 1976 in which he was elected. The second for reelection in 1980 in which he lost to Ronald Reagan.