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No matter who is president, they'll likely be the first to do something in office.
John F. Kennedy, for instance, was the youngest person to ever be elected, while Donald Trump was the oldest. Herbert Hoover was the first president to be born west of the Mississippi River, and Barack Obama was the first president to be born outside of the 48 contiguous states.
Keep scrolling to learn 15 records that have been broken by presidents of the United States.
President-elect Donald Trump's inaugural committeeraised the record-breaking $90 million for his inauguration, including a $1 million donation from Boeing and $500,000 from Chevron,Business Insider reported at the time.
For context, Barack Obama's inaugurations cost $55 million in 2009 and $43 million in 2013, according to the Associated Press.
Trump became theoldest president to be sworn in in 2017, beating the previous record set by Ronald Reagan in 1981. Reagan was 69 years and 348 days old at the time.
No matter who wins the 2020 election, this record will be broken. Trump is currently 74, while Joe Biden will be 78 by Inauguration Day.
Kennedy was elected in 1960, and he remained in office until he was assassinated in 1963. Sadly, that also makes himthe youngest president to die.
Roosevelt wasn't elected when he became president the first time. He took over in September 1901 after McKinley was assassinated in Buffalo, New York. Roosevelt was only 42 years old at the time.
In 1904, 46-year-old Roosevelt was elected in his own right. He defeated Democratic nominee Alton B. Parker to win the election.
Carter isboth the oldest living president, and the president with the longest life. He turned 96 on October 1, 2020, and celebrated at home with his wife, Rosalynn.
Tyler, the 10th president of the US, was married twice in his lifetime andhad 15 children: Mary, Robert, John, Letitia, Elizabeth, Anne, Alice, Tazewell, David, John Alexander, Julia, Lachlan, Lyon, Robert Fitzwalter, and Pearl, who was born when Tyler was 70.
While Obama was the first president to regularly use email, the distinction ofthe president with the first email address goes to Clinton who, in 1993, sent two emails — one as a test, and one to John Glenn, the famed astronaut, who was in orbit in the Space Shuttle.
Truman's code name was "General,"according to Guinness. Why did they implement code names? Because, with the "improvements in telecommunications technology," there was the threat of people illicitly listening to government communications — and thus, code names.
Other presidential code names include "Lancer" for Kennedy, "Providence" for Eisenhower, "Rawhide" for Reagan, "Searchlight" for Nixon, "Eagle" for Clinton, and "Trailblazer" for George W. Bush.
In fact,he's the first and only Eagle Scout to ever be elected president.
When Obama was elected in 2008, he made history as the first (and only) person of color to be elected president. He is also the first (and only) president to be born outside of the 48 contiguous states.
Nixon hasbeen on the cover of Time Magazine a whopping 55 times since its inception in 1923, making him themost frequent cover star in its history, and the most frequent male cover star. The most frequent woman on the cover is Hillary Clinton, who hasbeen on the cover at least 30 times.
The USS George Washington was theUS Navy's very first operational ballistic missile submarine. It was launched in 1959, and decommissioned in 1985.
Hoover, the 31st president of the United States, was born ina two-room cottage in West Branch, Iowa in 1874.
"This cottage where I was born is physical proof of the unbounded opportunity of American life," Hoover later said.
According to Guinness World Records, as of January 2016, Bush was officially named the person with thehighest number of edits on their Wikipedia page, with a whopping 45,871 edits (and counting).
In 1902, Roosevelt oversaw an extensive renovation of the White House that included the construction of a temporary office building called the West Wing. By 1909, the West Wing had become a permanent structure and the White House had doubled in size, with Taft becoming thefirst president to operate out of the Oval Office, which every president has done since.