- Source: List of presidents of the United States by other offices held
This is a list of presidents of the United States by other offices (either elected or appointed) held. Every president of the United States except Donald Trump has served as at least one of the following:
a member of the Presidential Cabinet (either Vice President or Cabinet secretary)
a member of Congress (either U.S. senator or representative)
a governor of a state
a general of the United States Army
Federal government
= Executive branch
=Vice presidents
Fourteen former vice presidents (R. Johnson, Breckinridge, Morton, Stevenson, Fairbanks, Garner, Wallace, Barkley, Nixon, Humphrey, Mondale, Quayle, Gore, and Pence) all made failed runs for the presidency. Breckinridge was nominated by the Southern Democratic Party in 1860 but came in second in the Electoral College. Humphrey, Mondale, and Gore received their party's nominations and Nixon received his party's nomination. Nixon would later be elected in a second run for the presidency becoming the first former vice president to try and win the presidency post-vice presidency. In 1984, Mondale would be the second former vice president to try for the presidency. In 1988, Vice President George H. W. Bush would be elected president. In 2020, Biden was the third former vice president to try for the presidency, and the second to win the presidency post-vice presidency. Theodore Roosevelt, Coolidge, Truman and Lyndon B. Johnson would become president after a presidential death in office and go onto win their own subsequent elections.
Cabinet secretaries
Calvin Coolidge (as the vice president) and Herbert Hoover both served in the Cabinet of Warren G. Harding.
Ambassadors
Other federal appointees
= Judicial branch
=Chief Justice of the United States
Other federal judges
= Legislative branch
=Senators
A number of future presidents served together while in the Senate:
Monroe served under Vice President Adams (1790–1794).
Jackson served under Vice President Jefferson (1797–1798). Jackson later served with Van Buren (1823–1825). Van Buren also served with W.H. Harrison (1825–1828) and Tyler (1827–1828). Buchanan also served with Tyler (1834–1836) and later served with Pierce (1837–1842). Both Buchanan and Tyler served under Vice President Van Buren (1833–1837), while Buchanan and Pierce later served under Vice President Tyler (1841).
B. Harrison briefly served under Vice President Arthur (1881).
L. Johnson served with both Nixon (1950–1953) and Kennedy (1953–1960). L. Johnson and Kennedy both served under Vice President Nixon (1953–1961).
Biden served under vice presidents Ford (1973–1974) and Bush (1981–1989) and later served with Obama (2005–2008).
James A. Garfield was elected senator for Ohio in 1880, but he did not take up the office due to being elected president later that year.
Seven former senators (Monroe, Adams, Jackson, W.H. Harrison, Pierce, Buchanan, and B. Harrison) were elected to the presidency without ever serving as the vice president between their departure from the Senate and the beginning of their presidencies.
Members of the House of Representatives
A number of future and former presidents served in the House together:
Jackson served with Madison (1796–1797).
W.H. Harrison served with Tyler (1816–1819).
Buchanan served with Polk (1825–1831). Polk also served with J. Q. Adams (1831–1839). J. Q. Adams later served with Fillmore (1833–1835; 1837–1843), Pierce (1833–1837), A. Johnson (1843–1848), and Lincoln (1847–1848). A. Johnson and Lincoln would continue to serve alongside each other (1848–1849).
Garfield served with both Hayes (1865–1867) and McKinley (1877–1880).
Nixon served with L. Johnson (1947–1949), Kennedy (1947–1950), and Ford (1949–1950). Ford, who continued to serve alongside Kennedy (1950–1953), later served with G. H. W. Bush (1967–1971).
1835 was the year in which the most former and future presidents served together in Congress: six presidents (Representatives J.Q. Adams, Pierce, Fillmore, and Polk, and Senators Buchanan and Tyler), who all served under vice president (and future president) Martin Van Buren.
The time period between 1891 and 1915 (24 years) was the longest time period with no former or future presidents serving in Congress. In total, there were 65 years in which no former or future president was serving in Congress.
As of 2024, there were 10 presidents who served in both chambers of congress (J.Q. Adams, Jackson, Pierce, Buchanan, A. Johnson, Kennedy, L.B. Johnson, and Nixon), 2 presidents who served in both the Continental Congress and the Congress of the United States (Madison and Monroe), and 1 president who served in both the Congress of the United States and the Provisional Congress of the Confederate States (President John Tyler).
= Continental Congress
=State and territorial government
= Governors
== State legislators
=See below for information about pre-1776 colonial offices held.
= Other statewide offices
=Local government
Presidents who had not previously held elective office
= With previous experience in government
== With previous experience in the military
== Without previous experience in government or the military
=Colonial governments
= Colonial and confederate legislators
=See also
List of former presidents of the United States who ran for office
List of vice presidents of the United States by other offices held
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- List of presidents of the United States by other offices held
- List of vice presidents of the United States by other offices held
- List of presidents of the United States by previous experience
- List of former presidents of the United States who ran for office
- President-elect of the United States
- List of residences of presidents of the United States
- List of first openly LGBTQ politicians in the United States
- President of the Continental Congress
- List of presidents of the Republic of China by other offices held
- United States presidential line of succession