Who was the first President actually born in the U.S.?
Saturday, June 22, 2024
None of the United States Presidents in the first 61 years of the nation's existence were actually born in the country they led. |
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N one of the United States Presidents in the first 61 years of the nation's existence were actually born in the country they led. The reason for this is simple enough: The first seven U.S. Presidents — George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, John Quincy Adams, and Andrew Jackson — were all born before 1776, and therefore before the United States was an independent nation. The first President who could actually claim to have been born a U.S. citizen was the country's eighth President, Martin Van Buren. Van Buren was born in 1782 in Kinderhook, New York, which also makes him the first native of the Empire State to be elected to the presidency. |
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Before becoming President in 1837, Van Buren served as Vice President under Andrew Jackson (who himself was born in 1767 in a territory disputed between the British colonies of North and South Carolina). Jackson's endorsement helped elevate Van Buren to the nation's highest office. However, his presidency was marked by a severe economic downturn, which sunk his bid for a second term. He was defeated in his campaign for reelection by William Henry Harrison, who was born in Virginia in 1773, making him the last U.S. President to come into the world a subject of the British Empire. |
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U.S. Presidents born in New York | | 5 |
| | U.S. Vice Presidents who went on to become President | | 15 |
| | U.S. Vice Presidents who went on to become President | | 15 |
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U.S. Presidents not born in the contiguous United States (Barack Obama was born in Hawaii) | | 1 |
| | U.S. Presidents born in Virginia, the most of any state | | 8 |
| | U.S. Presidents born in Virginia, the most of any state | | 8 |
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| | Did you know? |
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English was Martin Van Buren's second language. |
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Martin Van Buren may have been the first President born in the United States, but his first language wasn't English — it was Dutch. His family's roots in Kinderhook, New York, extended back before the nation's founding, and even before New York was a British colony. Van Buren could trace his heritage to Dutch immigrants who settled in the Kinderhook area in 1631, when New York was known as New Netherland. Even after control of the colony passed from the Dutch to the English, Kinderhook remained an overwhelmingly Dutch community, and the young Van Buren grew up speaking the Dutch language until he learned English in school, and became fluent in his teens. |
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posted by June Lesley at 4:00 AM
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