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Founding Presidents (1789-1829)
- George Washington: The Father of the United States – Lesson
- John Adams: A Stubborn but Dedicated Leader – Lesson
- Thomas Jefferson: The Author of Independence – Lesson
- Founding Presidents: Washington, Adams, and Jefferson – Quiz
- James Madison: The Father of the Constitution – Lesson
- James Monroe: Opposing the Federalists – Lesson
- John Quincy Adams: The Federalists who Abandoned the Party – Lesson
- Founding Presidents: Madison, Monroe, and Adams – Quiz
- George Washington: The Father of the United States – Quiz
- John Adams: A Stubborn but Dedicated Leader – Lesson
- John Adams: A Stubborn but Dedicated Leader – Quiz
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Civil War Presidents (1829-1869)
- Andrew Jackson: The First Democrat – Lesson
- Martin Van Buren: The Little Magician – Lesson
- Civil War Presidents: Jackson and Van Buren – Quiz
- William Henry Harrison: The Indian-Fighter – Lesson
- John Tyler: The First President to Not Be Elected – Lesson
- James Polk: Young Hickory – Lesson
- Zachary Taylor: Old Rough and Ready – Lesson
- Millard Fillmore: The Last Whig President – Lesson
- Franklin Pierce: A President Ruined by Slavery – Lesson
- Franklin Pierce: A President Ruined by Slavery – Quiz
- James Buchanan: A President for States’ Rights – Lesson
- James Buchanan: A President for States’ Rights – Quiz
- Abraham Lincoln: The Great Emancipator – Lesson
- Abraham Lincoln: The Great Emancipator – Quiz
- Andrew Johnson: The First President to Be Impeached – Lesson
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Reconstruction Presidents (1865-1901)
- Ulysses S. Grant: A Friend of Mark Twain – Lesson
- Ulysses S. Grant: A Friend of Mark Twain – Quiz
- Rutherford B. Hayes: The First President to Lose the Popular Vote – Lesson
- Rutherford B. Hayes: The First President to Lose the Popular Vote – Quiz
- James A. Garfield: The Last of the Log Cabin Presidents – Lesson
- James A. Garfield: The Last of the Log Cabin Presidents – Quiz
- Chester A. Arthur: A One Term President – Lesson
- Chester A. Arthur: A One Term President – Quiz
- Grover Cleveland: A President of Principle – Lesson
- Grover Cleveland: A President of Principle – Quiz
- Benjamin Harrison: The Second President in His Family – Lesson
- Benjamin Harrison: The Second President in His Family – Quiz
- William McKinley: The Third Presidential Assassination – Lesson
- William McKinley: The Third Presidential Assassination – Quiz
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20th Century Presidents
- Richard Nixon: The Only President to Ever Resign – Lesson
- Richard Nixon: The Only President to Ever Resign – Quiz
- Gerald Ford – America’s First Unelected President – Lesson
- Gerald Ford – America’s First Unelected President – Quiz
- Jimmy Carter – the President Who Promised He’d Never Lie – Lesson
- Jimmy Carter – the President Who Promised He’d Never Lie – Quiz
- Ronald Reagan – The ‘Peace Through Strength’ President – Lesson
- Ronald Reagan – The ‘Peace Through Strength’ President – Quiz
- George H.W. Bush – the 41st President – Lesson
- George H.W. Bush – the 41st President – Quiz
- Bill Clinton – The 42nd President – Lesson
- Bill Clinton – The 42nd President – Quiz
- George W. Bush – The 43rd President – Lesson
- George W. Bush – The 43rd President – Quiz
- Barack Obama – The 44th President – Lesson
- Barack Obama – The 44th President – Quiz
- Joe Biden – The 46th President – Lesson
- Joe Biden – The 46th President – Quiz
Bill Clinton – The 42nd President – Lesson
Impeached for lying under oath, he still had many accomplishments.
Bill Clinton, the 42nd president of the United States, was born William Jefferson Blythe III on Aug. 19, 1946, in Hope, Arkansas. His father died in an automobile accident just three months before his birth. In high school, he took his stepfather’s surname, which is why we know him as Bill Clinton today.
Early Years
The future president graduated from Georgetown University in 1968 and was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship to Oxford. In 1973, he graduated from Yale University with a law degree and returned to his home state to teach law at the University of Arkansas. While in college, he met Hillary Rodham, whom he married in 1975.
Politics
In 1976, Bill Clinton became the state’s attorney general at the age of 30. In 1978, he was elected governor of Arkansas. He lost his re-election bid in 1980 but was once again elected in 1982. His years in office were noted for progressive programs, especially his determination to improve public education. Still, some of his constituents felt he was too liberal.
President Bill Clinton
Bill Clinton won the Democratic nomination and went on to defeat Republican President George H.W. Bush and independent candidate Ross Perot in 1992. The Cold War had recently ended, but people were still suffering from a recession that began in the late 1980s. Between 1980 and 1994, there was a banking crisis that saw more than 1,600 banks close or in need of financial assistance.
During the first two years in the Oval Office, Clinton concentrated on health care reform, the North American Free Trade Agreement between the United States, Canada, and Mexico, and the federal budget. The trade agreement was signed in 1992 and started on Jan. 1, 1994. It lifted tariffs on the majority of goods produced by those nations. However, in 1994, the Republicans won a majority in both houses of Congress, the first time in 40 years.
Since Republicans had control, Bill Clinton tried to become more moderate in his politics, and, in 1996, he won re-election, defeating Senate Majority Leader Robert Dole. He became the first Democrat to win a second term since President Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR).
Clinton turned his attention to foreign policy and backed NATO bombing in Bosnia to stop ethnic cleansing. He also approved the bombing of Iraq to prevent Saddam Hussein from using use weapons of mass destruction, expanded international trade, and worked toward peace in Africa, the Middle East, and Northern Ireland.
When Bill Clinton was elected president in 1992, he vowed to provide “the most ethical administration in history.” However, in 1998, Clinton lied under oath, saying he had not had an intimate relationship with a White House intern, Monica Lewinsky. He later apologized for telling the falsehood, but calls came that he should resign or be impeached. The House of Representatives approved two articles of impeachment for perjury and obstruction of justice, but, in 1999, the Senate voted to acquit Clinton.
Clinton became the second president to be impeached; the first was Andrew Johnson in 1868. President Donald Trump became the third in 2019 and then again in 2021.
After apologizing, Clinton promised to keep working as hard as he could for the American people. Despite failing on his health care reform, he had many accomplishments, including creating 22 million jobs, the most ever under a single administration, according to a White House list of achievements. He raised education standards and increased school choice, connected 95% of schools to the internet, and the crime rate was the lowest in 26 years. Some other achievements include the signing of the Family and Medical Leave Act, smallest welfare rolls in 32 years, lowest poverty rate in 20 years, and the deactivation of more than 1,700 nuclear warheads in the former Soviet Union.
- Bill Clinton was the 42nd president of the United States.
- Bill Clinton was the second president to be impeached.
- Bill Clinton’s foreign policy helped to bring peace.