Incumbent Vice-president Martin Van Buren, Jackson Democrat, won the election of 1836.
who was elected president of texans in1836
Sam Houston
He was 53 years and 11 months old when elected president in November, 1836.
When he was elected in 1836, Martin Van Buren was the vice-president. After he took office as President in 1837, Richard M Johnson became his vice-president.
Yes. He was elected in November , 1836 and served one term as president. He was defeated in 1840 by William Henry Harrison.
Technically no one, because there was no election that year. Martin van Buren was elected in 1836, and inaugurated in '37.
Mirabeau B. Lamar
Richard Ellis was elected President of the Convention of 1836.
That would be Theodore Roosevelt, who became president upon the death of McKinley but then was elected to another term. Richard Nixon was the next former president to be elected president without the benefit of being the incumbent president.
Andrew Jackson WAS elected president in 1832 and again in 1836. He came close in 1828 but did not get the majority of electoral votes which is required by the Constitution for election and he lost out when the House decided the election against him.
I suspect you mean 1836, not 1863, since the last President of Texas left office in February of 1846, after Texas became a state of the United States. David G. Burnet was elected Interim President in 1836 by the convention that assembled to issue Texas' Declaration of Independence from Mexico. Later that year Sam Houston was elected by popular vote to be the first President of Texas. He was also the third President of Texas (the Texas Constitution did not have term limits, but it did not allow anyone to serve consecutive, or back to back, terms).
David G. Burnet was elected Interim President (1836) by the Convention that produced Texas' Declaration of Independence and their Constitution.Sam Houston was the 1st and 3rd President of Texas (1836-1838 & 1841-1844).Mirabeau B. Lamar was the 2nd President (1838-1841).Anson Jones was the last President (1844-1846).