Number 6, John Quincy Adams in 1843. See the link below.
Adams
First president - George Washington First vice president - John Adams
Yes. He was the second US President, but the first US President to occupy the White House.
John Adams was the first US president to live in the White House.
The first US census was made in 1790 under President George Washington.
That man was John Quincy Adams, the sixth US president.
John Adams was never photographed. His son John Quincy Adams was the first president photographed in 1843.
James K. Polk was the first US President to be photographed. Matthew Brady took a portrait of Polk on February 14, 1849, just three weeks before he left office and four months before his death.
About 35, I would say. They have all been photographed from the time that photography was invented. James K. Polk is often thought to be the first president photographed while in office. Some of the earlier presidents were photographed after they left office,
themillennialmirror.com/2017/01/20/which-president-inauguration-is-believed-to-have-been-the-first-one-photographed/
Best guess for the first U.S. President ever to be photographed while in office was James Knox Polk, who was President from March 4, 1845 to March 4, 1849. John Quincy Adams was the first president to photographed, but his photo was taken after he was President and while he was serving in CongressThere is what appears to be an early photo of William Henry Harrison but it may have been taken before he was elected. There is also a photo of John Tyler but it was most likely taken after he left office. It seems fairly certain that Polk was photographed while he was president.
The first president to be photographed while in office was James Polk, the 11th president. The photograph was taken on February 14, 1849 by Mathew B. Brady. Former president John Quincy Adams had been photographed at his home in 1843 by the Southworth and Hawes Studio. Andrew Johnson was photographed in 1845 before he was president. The photographer was Mathew B. Brady.
The first time a U.S. President was photographed was on March 4, 1841. William Henry Harrison posed for the photo on the day of his inauguration. The current location of the photo is unknown.
John Quincy Adams was the first President to be photographed (see Related Links), but this photo was taken in 1843 long after he left office and was serving in Congress.According to Whitehouse.gov, the first President to be photographed while in office was James Polk. There are copies of what look like a photo of William Henry Harrison, but I think these are a photo of a painting or drawing of Harrison made sometime later.
Polk in 1849 J Q Adams was previously photographed in 1843, but by then was no longer President.
No, James Madison was not photographed during his lifetime. He lived from 1751 to 1836, and photography was not developed as a technology until the late 1830s, after his death. Therefore, no known photographs of James Madison exist.
The first presidential inauguration known to have been photographed is the second inauguration of President Abraham Lincoln on March 4, 1865. The photographs were taken by Alexander Gardner, a prominent Civil War-era photographer.