Briefer thoughts on the second terms that almost made the cut for a full
post in this week’s series.
1)
The Virginians: Thomas
Jefferson, James Madison, and James Monroe, the Virginia
triumvirate who held the presidency from 1801 through 1825, each served two
terms. The two biggest events of the period happened in their first terms—the Louisiana
Purchase and the opening of the War of 1812—but there’s plenty of interest in
the second terms: Aaron
Burr’s 1807 treason trial; the Battle
of New Orleans in 1814-1815; the Missouri Compromise
of 1820. All worth their own posts—maybe next time, Virginians!
2)
Andrew Jackson: Jackson’s
second term was full of high-stakes showdowns, from the Nullification
Crisis that foreshadowed the Civil War and the unfolding battle between
Jackson and Nicholas
Biddle’s National Bank to the conflict over Indian Removal that led to the Trail
of Tears. Really seems like there’s a full post in there—my bad, Old
Hickory!
3)
Ulysses S. Grant: You
might have thought that no presidential administration could top Grant’s first term for
corruption, nepotism, and scandal. Then there was Grant’s second term,
which proved you mistaken. Yikes, Hero of Appomattox. Yikes.
4)
Late 19th/Early
20th Century Pseudo-Second-Termers: Grover
Cleveland was the only president to serve two non-consecutive terms, so
does he count? Then there’s William
McKinley, who served less than 5 months of his second term before he was
assassinated. Finally, there’s Teddy
Roosevelt, who took over for McKinley, finished that term, and then was elected
to another—his second? His first? I dunno. Sorry, guys, but not quite clear
enough to make the cut.
5)
Everybody Else: Calvin
Coolidge and Harry Truman are the same as TR—took over when Warren Harding
and Franklin
Roosevelt died, were only elected once, missed the cut. FDR himself was elected
to four terms—does he still have a second term in that case? As for Eisenhower,
Nixon, Reagan, Clinton, and George W. Bush—you all were close competitors, lots
of interesting late
20th and early 21st
century trends and issues, plenty to AmericanStudy there. Sorry, dudes. Just
didn’t happen.
But of course there’s a great way to focus more on these second terms—add your
thoughts on any or all of them for the weekend post! See you then,
Ben
PS. You know what to do!
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