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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
- Thomas Jefferson: The Author of Independence – Lesson
- Thomas Jefferson: The Author of Independence – Quiz
- James Madison: The Father of the Constitution – Lesson
- James Madison: The Father of the Constitution – Quiz
- James Monroe: Opposing the Federalists – Lesson
- James Monroe: Opposing the Federalists – Quiz
- John Quincy Adams: The Federalist Who Abandoned the Party – Lesson
- John Quincy Adams: The Federalist Who Abandoned the Party – Quiz
- Andrew Jackson – The First Democrat – Lesson
- Andrew Jackson – The First Democrat – Quiz
- Andrew Johnson: The First President to Be Impeached – Lesson
- Andrew Johnson: The First President to Be Impeached – 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
- Martin Van Buren: The Little Magician – Lesson
- Martin Van Buren: The Little Magician – Quiz
- William Henry Harrison: The Indian-Fighter – Lesson
- William Henry Harrison: The Indian-Fighter – Quiz
- John Tyler: The First President to Not Be Elected – Lesson
- John Tyler: The First President to Not Be Elected – Quiz
- James Polk: Young Hickory – Lesson
- James Polk: Young Hickory – Quiz
- Zachary Taylor: Old Rough and Ready – Lesson
- Zachary Taylor: Old Rough and Ready – Quiz
- Millard Fillmore: The Last Whig President – Lesson
- Millard Fillmore: The Last Whig President -Quiz
- 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
- Ulysses S. Grant: A Friend of Mark Twain – Lesson
- Ulysses S. Grant: A Friend of Mark Twain – Quiz
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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
- 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
- William McKinley: The Third Presidential Assassination – Lesson
- William McKinley: The Third Presidential Assassination – Quiz
- Theodore Roosevelt: The Rough Rider – Lesson
- Theodore Roosevelt: The Rough Rider – Quiz
- William Taft: From President to Chief Justice – Lesson
- William Taft: From President to Chief Justice – Quiz
- Woodrow Wilson: A War-Torn President – Lesson
- Woodrow Wilson: A War-Torn President – 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
William Taft: From President to Chief Justice – Lesson
Though Taft had been president, he always believed leading the Supreme Court was his highest honor.
William Taft (1857-1930) was the 27th president of the United States. He was the only president to also serve as chief justice. Born on September 15, 1857, Taft was raised in a political family. His father, Alphonso, was a Republican attorney who served as secretary of war and attorney general under President Ulysses S. Grant.
Becoming president was not really a goal, but he always had his “plate the right side up when offices were falling,” Taft said of himself. After graduating from Yale, he went to Cincinnati to study and practice law but was derailed when President William McKinley sent him to the Philippines as a chief civil administrator in 1900. This is where his career really took off.
Taft was very sympathetic towards the Filipinos. Since 1898, the U.S. military had been governing the people and the tactics were not very gentle. Taft built roads and schools and helped improve the economy. He also created a Constitution which included a Bill of Rights much like that of the United States.
President Theodore Roosevelt offered Taft a Supreme Court appointment – twice – but he turned it down because he wanted to stay in the Philippines. In 1904, he accepted the position of Roosevelt’s secretary of war, with the understanding he could still supervise the Philippines. For the next four years, Taft spent a lot of time traveling and even oversaw the construction of the Panama Canal as well as serving as a governor of Cuba.
Roosevelt had promised he would not run for office for a third term and started seeing Taft as his successor. Taft was not a fan of campaigning and said it was “one of the most uncomfortable four months of my life,” but he succeeded, partially by promising to follow the Roosevelt progressive plan.

However, Taft’s presidency didn’t go that smoothly and he ended up making Roosevelt so angry, the former president helped to start a new progressive party. Taft did not believe in his predecessor’s idea that more government is better and that presidents should have greater powers. He said Roosevelt “ought more often to have admitted the legal way of reaching the same ends.”
In 1912, Republicans renominated Taft, but Roosevelt left the party to lead the new Progressives. This led to the Democrat, Woodrow Wilson, winning the presidency. Taft was not too upset when he didn’t get re-elected. He turned to his greatest love and served as professor of law at Yale until becoming a Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, a position he held until 1930 when he died. His final position was his greatest honor. Taft wrote, “I don’t remember that I was ever President.”