With the four months between Election Day and Inauguration Day no longer being needed to be that long, the United States on January 23, 1933 ratified the 20th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. The main purpose was to reduce the time between election of the president and his term. The amendment took effect on October 15, 1933. With the four months between Election Day and Inauguration Day no longer being needed to be that long, the United States on January 23, 1933 ratified the 20th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. The main purpose was to reduce the time between election of the president and his term. The amendment took effect on October 15, 1933. With the four months between Election Day and Inauguration Day no longer being needed to be that long, the United States on January 23, 1933 ratified the 20th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. The main purpose was to reduce the time between election of the president and his term. The amendment took effect on October 15, 1933.
The inauguration for the first U.S. president, George Washington, was held on April 30, 1789 in New York City. Inauguration Day was originally set for March 15, giving electors from each state nearly four months after Election Day to cast their ballots for president. In 1937, the day of inauguration was changed by the Twentieth Amendment from March 4 to noon on January 20, beginning with Franklin Roosevelt's second term in 1937. In 1801, Thomas Jefferson became the first to be sworn in as president in Washington, D.C., which did not officially become the U.S. capital until that year.
Source: wikipedia
It is not good to have a "lame duck" president. That is, a president who knows he will not be in office long. It is especially bad if the new president is from the opposing party and won the election by putting down the current administration.
Therefore it seems wise to let the new president take office as soon after he is elected as an orderly transition can be made. When the constitution was written transportation was such that March seems as earlier as the new people could settle their affairs at home and travel to Washington. However, travel became much easier and there was no reason to wait until March to put the new government into power, so the date was moved up to January 20 for the president and January 3 for Congress.
1937 During Franklin D. Roosevelt's Second Inaguration. 1937 During Franklin D. Roosevelt's Second Inaguration.
Itβs always been in January..
1937
Don’t know
The 20th Amendment to the U. S. Constitution, ratified in January, 1933, changed Inauguration Day from March 4 to January 20 and changed the beginning/end of Senate and House terms from March 4 to January 3. The first inauguration to take place on January 20 was Franklin Roosevelt's second, in 1937.
Each term is 4 years, beginning on the 20th of January of the year after the election. The date was changed to January 20 from March 4 during the 1930s.
Originally the Presidential term ended in March following the November Election. That was changed in the 1930s to so that the term now ends in January.
The 20th Amendment to the U. S. Constitution changed the date on which the Presidential and Vice Presidential terms begin and end from March 4 to January 20, and it changed the date on which the terms of U. S. Senators and Congressmen begin and end from March 4 to January 3. The Amendment was ratified in 1933 and took effect in 1935 for Senators and Congressmen and 1937 for Presidents and Vice Presidents.
Amendment 20 moved the beginning of the president's term to January 20, from March 4.
Amendment 20 moved the beginning of the president's term to January 20, from March 4.
The date of the U.S. Presidential Inauguration was moved to January 20 beginning in 1937 (Inauguration Day had been March 4 from Washington's time through 1933).
The terms of U. S. Senators and Representatives always begin and end on the 3rd of January after the election. The date was changed to 3 January from 4 March in 1933 by the 20th Amendment to the U. S. Constitution, the same amendment that changed the presidential Inauguration Day to 20 January.
The current date of US presidential inauguration is January 20th. It was changed from March 4th by the 20th amendment to our constitution, which was ratified in 1933. The first president to be inaugurated on the new date was Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
US presidential inaugurations begin at noon EST on January 20th.
Including January and March, it's 13 weeks. In regular years it is 12 weeks and 6 days, and in leap years it is exactly 13 weeks. If referring to the period from the beginning of January to the beginning of March or from the end of January to the end of March (or middle to middle, etc.), it is eight weeks and three days in regular years and eight weeks and four days in leap years.
The first President to be inaugurated on January 20th was Franklin D. Roosevelt, in 1937. Previously, the Presidential inauguration date had been March 4. This was changed by the passage of the 20th Amendment, ratified on January 23, 1933. The 32nd President, FDR was both the first inaugurated on January 20 (his second of four terms) and the last inaugurated on March 4 (his first term in 1933).