Presidential Inauguration Firsts

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Presidential Inaugurations


"I Do Solemnly Swear . . ."

On Saturday, January 20, 2001, George W. Bush, former governor of the state of Texas became the 43rd President of the United States.

This marked the 63rd Presidential Inauguration in United States history.

32 of the inaugurations took place on March 4th. 15 have taken place on January 20th. The first President to be sworn in on January 20th was Franklin Delano Roosevelt, as he was sworn in for his second of four terms in 1937.


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This is a list of interesting firsts among Presidential Inaugurations:


George Washington - April 30, 1789
Oath of office taken out-of-doors.
Pronounced the words, "So help me God" after taking the oath; other presidents have followed this example.
Set the precedent of kissing the Bible after the oath.
Fireworks concluded the day's celebration, all of which was paid for by private citizens.
Because of pressing public business, the inaugural ball was held on May 7. The president's wife, Martha, did not make the trip to New York.
George Washington - March 4, 1793
Shortest inaugural address (135 words)
John Adams - March 4, 1797
First president to receive the oath from the Chief Justice of the United States (Oliver Ellsworth).
Thomas Jefferson - March 4, 1801
Began the custom of writing to Congress to accept the inauguration and arrange the time for the ceremonies.
The first and probably only president to walk to and from his inaugural.
First president to be inaugurated at the Capitol in Washington, D.C.
First newspaper extra of an inaugural address, printed by the National Intelligencer.
James Madison - March 4, 1809
First inaugural held in the Hall of the House.
First inaugural ball to be held on the day of the inauguration.
The United States Marine Band set a precedent by playing for the inaugural ball.
James Monroe - March 5, 1817
First president to take the oath out-of-doors in Washington.
John Q. Adams - March 4, 1825
First president sworn in wearing long trousers.
Andrew Jackson - March 4, 1829
First president to take the oath of office on the East Portico of the Capitol.
Martin Van Buren - March 4, 1837
First time that outgoing and incoming presidents (Jackson and Van Buren) rode together in a carriage to the Capitol for the inaugural.
First use of inaugural programs.
First use of floats in an inaugural parade.
First time two inaugural balls were held.
William H. Harrison - March 4, 1841
First president to arrive in Washington by railroad for his inaugural.
Longest inaugural address (10,000 words).
Broke precedent by beginning address, taking oath, and then resuming address.
First official planning of a parade to follow the inaugural at the Capitol. The parade or inaugural planning committee was appointed by the local political organization of the party victorious in the national election.
John Tyler - April 6, 1841
First vice president to assume the presidency due to the death of the president.
James Polk - March 4, 1845
First inaugural to be covered by telegraph.
First known newspaper illustration of a presidential inauguration. (The Illustrated London News)
Franklin Pierce - March 4, 1853
Drove to and from the Capitol standing up in his carriage.
Affirmed (rather than swore) the oath of office.
Broke precedent by not kissing the Bible, but merely placing his left hand on it.
First president to deliver inaugural address without referring to notes.
James Buchanan - March 4, 1857
First inaugural known to have been photographed.
Abraham Lincoln - March 4, 1865
First time that African-Americans participated in the inaugural parade.
Andrew Johnson - April 15, 1865
First instance of the Chief Justice administering the oath of office to the vice president upon the death of the president.
Ulysses S. Grant - March 4, 1873
First time that a congressional committee called for the president at the White House and escorted him to the Capitol.
First time that the governors of the states were invited to participate in inaugural events.
Rutherford B. Hayes - March 3, 1877, and March 5, 1877
First president to take the oath of office in the White House.
Was sworn in prior to Inauguration Day, because it fell on Sunday. Took oath privately on Saturday, March 3, and publicly on Monday, March 5, 1877.
James Garfield - March 4, 1881
The first time that a mother of the president attended the inaugural ceremonies.
First president to review the procession from a stand in front of the White House.
Chester A. Arthur - September 20, 1881, and September 22, 1881
First time the oath of office has been taken in the Vice President's Room of the Capitol.
Two ex-presidents (Grant and Hayes) were present at this ceremony.
William McKinley - March 4, 1897
First inaugural recorded by movie camera.
Had glass-enclosed reviewing stand in front of the White House.
William McKinley - March 4, 1901
First time that the House of Representatives was allowed to join with the Senate in making arrangements for the inaugural.
Theodore Roosevelt - September 4, 1901
The only President not sworn in on a Bible. Mr. Ansley Wilcox, at whose home Roosevelt took the oath of office, wrote in 1903, "According to my best recollection no Bible was used, but President Roosevelt was sworn in with uplifted hand."
Theodore Roosevelt - March 4, 1905
First time that telephones were installed on the Capitol Grounds for an inaugural.
William H. Taft - March 4, 1909
First time that a president's wife rode with her husband in the procession from the Capitol to the White House.
First use of an automobile in an inaugural parade (President Taft was not an occupant).
First time that the dome was illuminated; temporary searchlights were used.
Woodrow Wilson - March 4, 1913
The traditional inaugural ball was suspended.
Woodrow Wilson - March 4, 1917, and March 5, 1917
Broke the precedent by taking the oath on a Sunday.
First time that the oath has been taken privately in the President's Room at the Capitol.
First time that floodlights (as opposed to temporary searchlights) were used to illuminate the Capitol dome during an inaugural.
First time that women participated in the inaugural parade.
Warren G. Harding - March 4, 1921
First president to ride to and from his inaugural in an automobile.
First use of loudspeakers at an inaugural.
First use of the steel-framed inaugural stand that was used until 1981.
Calvin Coolidge - August 3, 1923
Oath of office given by the president's father, a Vermont Justice of the Peace.
Calvin Coolidge March 4, 1925
First time an ex-president (William Taft) administered the oath of office as Chief Justice.
First inaugural to be broadcast nationally by radio.
Herbert Hoover - March 4, 1929
First inaugural to be recorded by a talking newsreel.
Affirmed (rather than swore) the oath.
Franklin D. Roosevelt - January 20, 1937
First president to be inaugurated on the January 20th date, a change made by the 20th Amendment to the Constitution.
First time the vice president--elect was inaugurated out-of-doors on the same platform with the president-elect. No vice presidential address was given.
Franklin D. Roosevelt - January 20, 1941
First president to take the oath of office for a third term.
Franklin D. Roosevelt - January 10, 1945
First and only time a president was inaugurated for a fourth term. (The 22d Amendment to the Constitution, ratified in 1951, restricts the presidency to two terms.)
Harry S. Truman - January 20, 1949
First inauguration to be televised.
Dwight D. Eisenhower - January 20, 1953
Broke with custom by reciting his own improvised prayer instead of kissing the Bible.
A presidential preference made homburgs an inaugural must, displacing traditional black toppers.
Dwight D. Eisenhower - January 20, 1957, and January 21, 1957
First time that a president was inaugurated for a term limited by the Constitution (22d Amendment).
First presidential luncheon, held in the Old Supreme Court Chamber (S--228) in the Capitol.
John F. Kennedy - January 20, 1961
First president to be inaugurated on the extended East Front.
First time that a Speaker of the House administered the oath of office to the vice president. (Previously the oath had been given by either the President pro tempore of the Senate, the ex--Vice President, or a United States Senator.)
First time a poet, Robert Frost, participated in the official ceremonies at the Capitol.
First time that both parents of the president-elect attended their son's inauguration.
As the first Catholic elected president, Kennedy was the first to use a Catholic (Douay) version of the Bible for his oath.
First inaugural parade for which Army flame throwers were used to clear snow from Pennsylvania Avenue.
First appearance of the Air Force Academy Band in the parade.
First time that the parade was televised in color (NBC).
First inauguration celebrated with five balls.
Last president to wear traditional stovepipe hat to the inauguration.
Lyndon B. Johnson - November 22, 1963
First time that the oath was administered in an airplane (Air Force One, a Boeing 707, at Love Field in Dallas, Texas).
First time that the oath was administered by a woman, Sarah T. Hughes, U. S. District Judge of the Northern District of Texas.
Lyndon B. Johnson - January 20, 1965
First time that a press gallery was installed on the Capitol Grounds.
First use of a bullet-proofed, closed limousine.
Richard M. Nixon - January 20, 1969
Only persons with special invitations to the ceremony were admitted to the Capitol Grounds.
Two Bibles were used in the inauguration; they were family heirlooms, dated 1928 and 1873.
Gerald R. Ford - August 4, 1974
First unelected vice president to assume the presidency.
First vice president to assume the presidency under the provisions of the 25th Amendment to the Constitution, which specifies that, upon the resignation of the president, the vice president shall become president.
Jimmy Carter - January 20, 1977
Folding chairs instead of wooden benches were used on the East Plaza.
Used an old family Bible; second Bible on lectern had been used at inauguration of George Washington.
At Carter's request, the traditional inaugural luncheon was not held.
First president to walk all the way from the Capitol to the White House with his family after ceremony.
First time that an outgoing President left from the Capitol Grounds aboard a helicopter.
Solar heat was used in the reviewing stand.
Provisions were made for the handicapped to watch the parade.
Ronald Reagan - January 20, 1981
Outdoor band concert was held on the West Front lawn on the day before the inaugural.
First inaugural held on the West Terrace of the Capitol.
First time that room EF--100 was used as a holding room.
First closed-captioning of television broadcast for the hearing impaired.
First post-inaugural luncheon held in Statuary Hall.
Post-inaugural luncheon was partially televised.
Nine inaugural balls were held.
First time that an inaugural ball was held in a legislative building (Rayburn House Office Building).
Balls were transmitted by satellite to 32 ballroom sites across the country.
Ronald Reagan - January 20, 1985, and January 21, 1985
First time that the oath was taken in the Rotunda.
First inaugural that fell on a Super Bowl Sunday.
The Bible was placed on a marble-topped table that was built for the second inaugural of Abraham Lincoln. The table was constructed with an iron baluster cast for the Capitol dome in the 1860's.
First time a television camera was placed inside the president's limousine from the Capitol to the White House.
William J. Clinton - January 20, 1997
First time that the ceremony was broadcast live on the Internet.
First inaugural that fell on the Martin Luther King, Jr., holiday.
http://search.netscape.com/ns/boomf...=1&remove_url=http://www.coolquiz.com/trivia/
 
Russia celebratin' Trump's inauguration...

Champagne corks pop in Moscow at Trump's inauguration
Jan 20,`17 -- Champagne corks popped Friday in Moscow as Russians celebrated the start of Donald Trump's presidency, confident of better relations ahead between the two countries.
"It's weird, but it's great, and for the first time ever Russians are applauding the victory of a U.S. presidential candidate," political analyst Stanislav Byshok said. Trump's promises to fix ravaged relations with Moscow have elated Russia's political elite following spiraling tensions with Washington over the Ukrainian crisis, the war in Syria and allegations of Russian meddling in the U.S. election. "We are ready to do our share of the work in order to improve the relationship," Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev said on Facebook. About 100 Trump sympathizers, nationalists and spin doctors gathered at a trendy loft just a few hundred meters away from the Kremlin to celebrate Friday, with a triptych of Trump, Russian President Vladimir Putin and French nationalist politician Marine Le Pen in the center of the hall.

An hour before Trump took the stage in Washington, the sound of opening champagne bottles echoed in the vaulted hall. The party was co-sponsored by the conservative Tsargrad TV channel, which is led by ultra-right ideologue Alexander Dugin. "Yes, it's a holiday," said a beaming Dmitry Rode, a communications executive with a glass of champagne in his hand. "We all hope that relations between our countries and more importantly between our peoples will help to develop our economies. We're neighbors, we're just 50 kilometers (30 miles) away from each other." Some party-goers wore Guy Fawkes masks, associated with hackers, in a sly reference to charges that Russia interfered in the U.S. election. "I'm happy for all Russian hackers," said 27-year-old IT professional Filip Nikolsky, who wore a sweatshirt with the "You've Been Hacked" slogan. He said he doesn't know if the hacking allegations are true but "if it's true, why shouldn't we be happy?"

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People watch the presidential inauguration ceremony for Donald Trump in a network and party location in Moscow, Russia, Friday, Jan. 20, 2017. A hundred Trump sympathizers, nationalist activists and spin doctors gathered at a hipster party location several hundred meters away from the Kremlin to celebrate.​

Still, the mood at the party in downtown Moscow was subdued compared to outbursts of joy at the news of Trump's victory in November. Revelers on Friday watched Trump make his inauguration speech in silence, and no one stood up for the American anthem, although the host suggested that all Americans should do so. At another Moscow nightclub, several dozen people began toasting Trump late Thursday. Willi Tokarev, 82, a singer who emigrated to the U.S. in the mid-1970s and later became a music legend in Russia, topped the entertainment bill with his song "Trumplissimo America!" Trump's praise for Putin has raised expectations that he could move to normalize ties, although Trump hasn't articulated a clear policy and some of his Cabinet nominees have made hawkish statements on Russia.

Leonid Slutsky, the head of the foreign affairs committee in the lower house of parliament, expressed hope that Trump will move to establish constructive ties with Moscow, but cautioned there is no "magic button" to instantly achieve that. "We expect a slow but steady revival of our relations," he said. Dmitri Trenin, director of the Carnegie Moscow Center, predicted that Moscow will face a pragmatic but very tough partner in Trump. "Russia's potential is incomparable to that of the United States," he said, adding that Moscow will have to apply a lot of skills "to play from the position of weakness and not lose." Speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Russian Deputy Prime Minister Igor Shuvalov voiced hope that Trump will work with Putin on solving the Ukrainian crisis and other problems, but warned against expectations of quick progress. "Difficulties will remain," he said.

News from The Associated Press
 

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