July brings another quartet of presidential birthdays.

Here are they are:

  1. July 4, 1872: Calvin Coolidge
    BORN ON THE FOURTH OF JULY!🇺🇸 🎈
    (Three died on July 4th, but Coolidge is the only one with a July 4 bday!)

  2. July 6, 1946: George W. Bush

  3. July 11, 1767: John Quincy Adams

  4. July 14, 1913: Gerald Ford

If you prefer by birth order:

  1. July 11, 1767: John Quincy Adams

  2. July 4, 1872: Calvin Coolidge

  3. July 14, 1913: Gerald Ford

  4. July 6, 1946: George W. Bush


Dads

  • The most obvious observation about this grouping is that half of them were sons of presidents.

  • Calvin Coolidge’s dad administered the oath of office when Coolidge abruptly became president.

  • Gerald Ford’s dad was the worst of the bunch… his birth father was a monster who began violently abusing his wife on their honeymoon. I cannot even fathom the courage it took for her to bundle her 16-day-old baby and escape.

Names

They were all kinda sorta named after their dads and two of them changed their names:

  • John Quincy Adams’ dad was John Adams

  • George W. Bush's dad was George H.W. Bush (you know this, I’m sure… but I’m getting at something)

  • Gerald Ford’s dad was Leslie King, Sr. Ford was originally named Leslie King, Jr., but his name was eventually changed to his stepfather’s name

  • John Calvin Coolidge, Jr. dropped both the John and the Jr. to distinguish himself from his father (then went ahead and named his son Calvin Coolidge, Jr….?)

1920: The Year of the Six Presidents, by David Pietrusza; this quote has nothing to do with anything … but it’s newly-elected VP Coolidge to his dad and shows their relationship. Check out this post if you want to see who I think the dog should have bitten instead.


Political party

Democratic-Republican

  • John Quincy Adams

Republican

  • Calvin Coolidge

  • George W. Bush

  • Gerald Ford


Vice Presidents

Coolidge and Ford both had a vacant VP slot for a bit.

JQA’s VP:

  • John C. Calhoun

    • I’ve not been shy about saying I do not like Calhoun. I recently learned that JQA had a bunch of respect for him! What?! And then he didn’t. Calhoun did an about-face (politically-speaking; though I do wonder if the timing matches up with him morphing from a handsome man into the stuff of nightmares), after which JQA said that he “now expect(s) nothing from him but evil.”

    • Also, so weird — they knew Calhoun was veep-elect before they knew who was elected president!!

Coolidge’s VP:

Ford’s VP:

  • vacant (for 4-ish months after Richard Nixon’s resignation)

  • Nelson Rockefeller

George W. Bush

  • Dick Cheney


Terms … and loss

  • Ford served less than a term, finishing up Nixon’s presidency and not getting reelected

  • JQA served one term… and get this! He didn’t win the popular vote or electoral college!

  • Coolidge finished Harding’s term, then served a full term

  • Bush served two terms … he lost the popular vote for one of those elections in a very messy and memorable way

I was shocked to realize that two July birthday babies were in elections that made my list of 5 Reasons to Love the Electoral College. (In case you don’t click the link, you should know this is tongue-in-cheek. I still can’t find a single reason why the Electoral College makes any sort of sense.)


Children

There’s an overwhelming amount of heart-wrenching tragedy for the first half of the birthday boys… and tragedy that may not have happened if these guys hadn’t gone into politics…?

JQA & Louisa

Louisa suffered many miscarriages and ultimately they had four children:

  • A daughter who died at one year old

  • Three sons — two named after presidents

    • The two named after presidents (George Washington Adams and John Adams II) were also the two children they left behind when they were abroad for diplomatic posts — I just learned that Louisa wasn’t a part of that decision! It was made for her by her husband and mother-in-law and I cannot even wrap my head around that.

    • Those two ultimately suffered from alcoholism and met early deaths — George at 28-years-old, having gone overboard the steamship Benjamin Franklin … and John five years later at 31. JQA had to take the ship his older son had met his fate on … to say his goodbyes to his other son.

    • John Adams wrote “there is no medicine for this wound.”

    • Louisa was pissed when she found out — from a newspaper!! — soon after George’s death that JQA was running for Congress: “The grave of my lost child? The grasping ambition which is an insatiable passion swallowing and consuming all in it's ever devouring maw.”

    • And Charles Francis Adams

  • Here’s more info, if you’re interested

 

Calvin & Grace Coolidge

  • Calvin, Jr. came “home” from college to the White House. He played tennis with his brother. Developed a blister. Within a week, he died from blood poisoning.

Gerald & Betty Ford

  • Four children

George W. & Laura Bush

  • The only president with twins! Finally — a fact that is in fact fun!


Coolidge was hit by a Ford

Cars made Coolidge nervous. A reporter wrote that “it was as good as a show to watch him cross… he… glanced, birdlike, up and down the street, measuring the distance to the nearest car, and if he thought he could make it, he started to cross. If that car brushed his coat tails, he would not run. He had faith in his calculation.”

Too much faith, perhaps.

He was hit by a Ford while distractedly crossing the street.

I’m sure it could have gone without saying that the Ford that hit him was not Gerald. And at the time, Ford was only 10 years old or so and still legally named Leslie King. His name wasn’t officially changed until a decade or so after Coolidge was hit by the Ford, thus proving both conclusively and unnecessarily that Gerald had nothing to do with it.


Professional sports

  • Ford was recruited by both the Green Bay Packers and the Detroit Lions; he turned them both down

  • Bush was part-owner of the Texas Rangers


First Ladies

Louisa Adams

  • JQA complained about his mom’s impossible “requisites” for a wife, saying “I would certainly be doomed to perpetual celibacy.”

  • One of just two foreign-born first ladies

  • One of two London weddings (Edith and Theodore Roosevelt were the other)

Grace Coolidge

  • Loved kids and animals

  • Her mom wanted her to wait to get married — either until she had a year’s worth of work experience or learned to bake bread. “We will buy bread” was Calvin’s answer.

Betty Ford

  • Raised awareness and reduced the stigma for both breast cancer and addiction

  • Far more popular than her husband

Laura Bush

  • An only child

  • School librarian


Death

  • JQA: died at work on February 23.

  • Coolidge: died shaving on January 5. Grace found him. (The first time she ever laid eyes on him, he was also shaving)

  • Ford: died the day after Christmas; he’s one of two presidents to die during W’s presidency (the other was Ronald Reagan).


Other doodles were inspired by:

The Loves of Theodore Roosevelt: The Women Who Created a President, by Edward F. O’Keefe

First Women: The Grace and Power of America's Modern First Ladies, by Kate Andersen Brower

Decision Points, by George W. Bush 


Heather Rogers, America's Preeminent Presidential Doodler

Heather isn’t a historian, an academic, or an impartial storyteller… but she has read more than one book about every U.S. president. Out of spite. She was dubbed America’s Preeminent Presidential Doodler by one of her favorite authors and she’s been repeating it ever since. When she’s not reading or doodling history books, she’s a freelance graphic designer and illustrator.

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