The military operations led led to the Battle of Antietam saw two future US presidents serve for the Union. Lieutenant Colonel Rutherford B.Hayes commanded the Twenty third Ohio regiment. He would be the 19th US president. He was a Republican and served as president from 1877-81. Hayes had a platoon which was led Sergeant William McKinley. McKinley would become the 25th US president. He served as a Republican from 1897-1901.
Washington's actions as President set a precedent for future Presidents to follow.
14 presidents served as vice president before becoming president
All the US presidents that served before 1956 or after April 1975.
The presidents were Franklin Delano Roosevelt who was succeded by vice president Harry Truman
7
Actually many future Presidents were commanded by Presidents. Example: JF Kennedy served in the Navy under Roosevelt and Trueman (Who served in the Army under Wilson). LB Johnson served in the Navy under FDR, George HW Bush served in the Navy under FDR & Trueman. Many of the Presidents served in the military and took orders from the Presidents in office.
Washington's actions as President set a precedent for future Presidents to follow.
There were 25 US presidents who never served in the Senate.
Eisenhower JFK LBJ Nixon Ford Reagan GHW Bush
I count five: Grant, Hayes, Garfield, B. Harrison and McKinley.
all
p o
14 presidents served as vice president before becoming president
George Washington was the only future president that was directly involved in the war. He served as an officer in British army and saw serious action. The other future presidents who were alive then, lived near the east coast and were along way from any fighting.
Woodrow Wilson was one
Six future presidents served in the navy - George H. W. Bush, Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson, Nixon, Ford and Carter. Both Roosevelts served as assistant-secretaries of the Navy. Bush was a navy pilot since there was no separate air force department in those days.
US senators never elect the US president. Possibly some future senators or ex-senators once served as electors.